Context: out of the several languages I've studied, I only consider myself fluent in English.
For me, fluency means I'm in this thread, on this forum, and am able to talk about anything that comes up with the people here, to the same degree of complexity I would in my native language. If there are any obstacles to understanding others, they are almost always cultural rather than linguistic. I still look up words and expressions almost every day, but most of what I learn now feels like a bonus on top of what I already know, not like a key part of the language that I was missing. They help me express things in a more brief, elegant or convincing way, but I could still say the same thing with different words.
So I guess to me fluency means I feel as free in a foreign language as I am in my native one.
Do you think fluency outside of linguistic immersion is attainable?I had to google linguistic immersion and there seem to be several meanings of the term and I don't know which one you mean. How is it different from either a foreign language class, or doing your studies in a language that's not your native one? I've experienced both (with English) but I was already fluent when the latter happened.
Was there something that you feel really increased your fluency/brought your language skills to the next level? Yeah, watching foreign language cartoons without subtitles. Then subtitled movies. Then, movies without subtitles. Playing computer games, using software and (to some degree) programming in that language. I guess the trick with all of these is that they're genuinely interesting, fast paced, and they always have an extra layer of information (visual, auditory, or the game/program doing what you want) that can patch the gaps in your linguistic skills, effectively teaching you things that you never set out to learn deliberately.
I imagine living in a country where the foreign language is spoken is the holy grail of language acquisition, but I haven't had access to that.
What are your goals with your learning language(s)?I'm not learning any new language at the moment, but perhaps using English to talk to y'all and read stuff online counts to some degree as learning, since I learn new things almost every day
At this point I don't have a goal, I'm fine with just reaping the benefits of being fluent for now.