Thanks for your compliment. Indeed I am still learning Hokkien from many sources including this forum.
I am very interested in linguistics but unfortunately I don't have any formal training in it.
I love Hokkien very much because it's my mother tongue, the first language I learned. I was born in a Hokkien speaking town in Eastern Sumatra, just across strait from Melaka.
I came to cherish more the language during my teens when I realized that its continuity was endangered. I have been learning it more seriously from then, about ten years ago, mainly from my parents, Taiwanese TV, internet, books, etc.
The more I learn, the more I love our ancestral language for its features: tone sandhi, nasal vowels, literary & colloquial pronunciations, reduplication, etc.
I agree that English & Mandarin are very important nowadays. It's good that many people (including Hokkiens) are paying attention on these two languages. But it's not the reason to abandon our mother tongues (ancestral languages), right? Our own languages (any languages, not limited to Hokkiens) are our heritages. Multilingualism is a very good thing. Languages can enrich each other.
I hope Hokkien will be used by more and more Hokkiens people, becoming a lively language for any aspects of our daily life. Same hope goes for all endangered languages.
Let's work together to preserve our beloved ancestral language!
Phai sei, na si gua kong siu~ cue ue a...
