ThomasX wrote:
Dia dhuit,
I have been exploring many different online resourses for learning Irish and there are many! I am undecided on which approach to take, so I thought that I would get some feedback from y'all.
I have seen that a lot of the instruction courses simply force you to memorize phrases and tell you their English equivalent. I guess this would be useful in a structured and predictable conversation or for use in familiar circumstances. One can't really rely on this for a solid understanding of the language.
I really do not want to go that route, though. I want to start by knowing what each word means and eventually, all of their forms. This would eventually give me clues as to the grammatically correct order in which to use the words to construct sentences.
Would it be a sensible approach to just start building a large vocabulary by studying Irish words and their *shudder* pronunciations? Not needing to fit them together at first, but learning kind of like a child does?
This would be complicated by the fact that I would not be hearing the words all day and they would not be reinforced the same way. I could just start spending all my free time with recorded Irish in the background and watching a lot of Irish television.
I am sure different parts of the brain are used for different kinds of learning so it may just be trial and error.
Sorry for the slight rambling. I am typing this right before I am going to bed so I am a bit tired.

Any thoughts would be greatly appreciated.
Part of the problem with the approach you want to take is that language is more than a sum of its words. You can memorize a lot of words and not be able to put together a coherent sentence.
For example, you can't say "I like chocolate" in Irish by learning words for "I," "like," and "chocolate" and then plugging them into English syntax. You have to learn that, in Irish, you say "I like" something by literally saying "Is good with me _____." That's where repeating all those phrases comes in.
A child doesn't really learn by learning individual words, at least not in isolation. A child might start, for example, by pointing and saying "cookie!" but very soon the parent is going to require more of it: "Yes, it's a cookie. Do you want the cookie?" And all the time the child is (hopefully!) hearing examples of correct sentence structure and being rewarded for attempting them. That's hard to replicate as an adult, especially as an adult learning in relative isolation.
I'd recommend a multi-pronged approach. Get one of the self-teaching books (preferably one that includes audio) and start working with that. That will give you both grammar and pronunciation in one package.
At the same time, work on increasing vocabulary. One of the ways I encourage learners to do that is by labeling things with sticky notes (which I nicked from mhwombat!). You can label a room, for example, with words such as "balla" (wall), "bord" or "tábla" (table), "teilfís" (television) and then plug those words into the grammar you're learning.
And yes...spend some time every day listening to Irish on the radio or television (resources we're very fortunate to have these days, thanks to the internet!). That will help train your ear to hear the language.
Redwolf