gboothe in the newbie reporter thread wrote:...My daidai senpai Jack Seward (R.I.P.)...
I just found again Jack Seward's definition of fluency which appeared in the Tokyo Weekender:
Nihongo ga ojozu, desu ne! Fluent in Japanese, anyone? By Jack Seward
In general, I would define fluency as linguistic competence roughly equivalent to that of a graduate of an upper-middle school. Admittedly, this is an arbitrary determination, but I like to think that anyone deemed to be fluent in Japanese should have the following qualifications:
1. When using a Japanese name and speaking to a stranger on the telephone, he or she should be able to pass for a Japanese - or come close to it.
2. Know all or almost all of the 1,875 (?) Toyo Kanji with the on and kun readings and at least a couple of the compounds.
3. Be able to read a letter written in gyosho. (I won't hold out for sosho.)
4. Be able to understand all or almost all of a newscast, if the subject matter is not impossibly technical.
5. Be able to read a newspaper or magazine article with only very occasional reference to a kanji dictionary. (I confess that I probably have to resort to a lexicon five or ten times while struggling though an article of average length, although in the case of my beloved ero-manga, I can peruse the provocative print with fewer dictionary detours.)
6. Write a decent letter in kaisho Japanese.
7. Give a ten-minute impromptu talk in comprehensible and correct Japanese an every-day topic requested by your audience.
8. Carry on a torrid love affair in words that will enable you to win the heart of your intended, who must speak no English.
9. Identify (even if you cannot completely understand) three rural dialects.
10. Stroll through your shopping district and read the first 20 signs you see in Japanese.
I think no matter what order these conditions are in, I hit "Strike Three" pretty quickly. I suspect other FGs fare much better. Looking at No.10, I recall Steve Bildermann saying earlier that part of his intensive Japanese training involved his teacher taking the class out on the street and barking at them to read whatever he pointed towards.