42x16ss said:
Does anyone know of a good online resource for learning Spanish? (Preferably free

) I'm not a total beginner, my grandparents taught me when I was younger and I was getting conversational when I lived in Europe but I haven't had anyone at all to speak it with in about 8 years (the joys of living in such a proud, single language nation

)
My fiancée and I are planning to do a lot of travelling after we get married next year and it will be very useful if I tune up.
Yes.
where to begin.
One thing that immediately comes to mind is "Destinos". A tv seriers created in the 1990's by the University of Chicago I think it was for English speakers to immerse in Spanish. There's a basic story of a woman looking for her lost relative from the Spanish civil war and flying all over the hispanic world looking for her. Very basic, each episode the dialogue gets a little more complicated. Easily findable online.
There's also of course the Spanishdict website which you might know. Specifically their forum. Any grammar question you have, leave it there and someone will answer it, usually within a few minutes.
But what I would reccomend are listening to tapes such as Pimsleur or Michel Thomas. Preferably Pimsleur. Its 45 hours of recordings. 3 units, 30 tapes in each unit, each half an hour long.
How they work is they give you the English in conversations and then a few seconds pause (though you can pause yourself if you need more) to translate into Spanish. And repeat the process over and over again with variations on the sentence or conversation.
They are in my opinion very good because they immerse you in the language, and help your brain figure out the grammar for itself. 1 hour (2 lessons of tapes) a day and your brain thinks automatically.
If you think you already are good you can skip unit 1 or maybe even unit 2. But its worth doing them even if you know them just to get practice.
Far better than flashy **** like Rosseta stone or everyone's favourite - duolingo. These make out learning languages to be fun, and can be but ultimately learning a language will get boring and 99% of people who use duolingo just give up when they get tired of it or have to figure **** out for themselves.
Pimsleur is boring- that's the point. If you can get through 45 hours of it you are for serious. And rewarding.
Also, tapes like Pimsleur or MT, even if basic teach you to understand and speak. Which is quick and on the spot. Duolingo or RS teach you to write and read and work out the grammar.
The former is far more important. Real world conversations are quick, even if the person is being nice to you and trying to speak slowly. You need to be able to form the sentences fast, and won't know how to do that if you use programmes that involve picking out written words.
By all means try duolingo too though since its free. Every little bit helps.
Ultimately though all virtual or online resources will only be able to get you to a certain very base level. No matter how much you do it the second you land in the country you won't understand word 1. Speaking with real people, once you have a base level, is a must, even if you struggle at first.
And I reccomend any immersion techniuqes. Eg giving up your own music and listening just to Spanish language music. With Spanish I think its quite easy as they have some real cool stuff like Salsa Bachata Merengue Mariachi, all slow and easier to understand. Do that for a few months and it helps too.
A lot of people say to watch films too. that's a bit more complicated since you need a very high level and even then a lot of them will use heavy slang. If you must watch films better to get your hands on Spanish versions of English films.