What Is a Native Speaker?
A native speaker is someone who has spoken a language since early childhood, typically acquiring it naturally in a home or community environment rather than through formal instruction.
Characteristics of Native Fluency
Native speakers usually demonstrate intuitive grammar usage, natural pronunciation, idiomatic expressions, and cultural nuances that are difficult to replicate through second-language learning alone.
Why It Matters
Understanding native speaker norms helps linguists, educators, and learners set realistic goals in language acquisition and appreciate the depth of cultural context embedded in everyday speech.