Language teachers - is it really possible to become fluent in a language as an adult? And what do you class as fluent? I've read that until the age of about 7, a child can cope quite easily with more than one language, merely flitting between them as though tuning a radio. After that, the brain starts to translate, albeit very quickly for some people and that true fluency is pretty much unobtainable.
All of this is pretty disheartening for me really, since I did French with the OU last year and have my own French tutor who is French. Interestingly, her English, whilst being exceptionally good is, not what I would call "fluent" in that she gets words wrong and makes grammatical errors.
I love learning language, and whilst not particularly gifted in them, I do really enjoy them. I think they are an intellectual discipline in themselves and, as such, think they are worth learning just for that reason.
However, on the few trips to Italy I've made, and with no more real knowledge than a phrase book, I have found Italian considerably easier (being a phonetic language) than French and wonder why that is not pushed more here.