Can you understand a language without being proficient?











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My character was raised by elves and never learned Common language. Throughout his adventures, he had learned some words of Common, here and there, mainly daily words, like "name", greetings, until at least he (I think) should be able to understand conversations and respond well, except complex topic.



My previous AL DM allows me to understand quest briefing, conversation with NPC, without me having the proficiency in Common language. However, as I'm going to try different DMs, I'm unsure that such thing should be allowed: understand a language you're not proficient with.



Is there a rule in the book that supports that PC can understand typical conversation in a language they're not proficient with?



If yes, then what is the point of having language proficiency? (But that might be better for other question)










share|improve this question


















  • 7




    how come your character doesn't speak Common? Since all races do (even the monstrous races from VGtM), I assume it's by choice / for roleplaying reasons?
    – PixelMaster
    Dec 2 at 10:51








  • 2




    @PixelMaster yes, exactly.
    – Vylix
    Dec 2 at 11:27






  • 2




    You want a gimmick without the mechanical consequences of it?
    – András
    Dec 2 at 11:28










  • @András nah, the DM sick of me asking each time to other character, so he just narrate it so.
    – Vylix
    Dec 2 at 11:31















up vote
2
down vote

favorite












My character was raised by elves and never learned Common language. Throughout his adventures, he had learned some words of Common, here and there, mainly daily words, like "name", greetings, until at least he (I think) should be able to understand conversations and respond well, except complex topic.



My previous AL DM allows me to understand quest briefing, conversation with NPC, without me having the proficiency in Common language. However, as I'm going to try different DMs, I'm unsure that such thing should be allowed: understand a language you're not proficient with.



Is there a rule in the book that supports that PC can understand typical conversation in a language they're not proficient with?



If yes, then what is the point of having language proficiency? (But that might be better for other question)










share|improve this question


















  • 7




    how come your character doesn't speak Common? Since all races do (even the monstrous races from VGtM), I assume it's by choice / for roleplaying reasons?
    – PixelMaster
    Dec 2 at 10:51








  • 2




    @PixelMaster yes, exactly.
    – Vylix
    Dec 2 at 11:27






  • 2




    You want a gimmick without the mechanical consequences of it?
    – András
    Dec 2 at 11:28










  • @András nah, the DM sick of me asking each time to other character, so he just narrate it so.
    – Vylix
    Dec 2 at 11:31













up vote
2
down vote

favorite









up vote
2
down vote

favorite











My character was raised by elves and never learned Common language. Throughout his adventures, he had learned some words of Common, here and there, mainly daily words, like "name", greetings, until at least he (I think) should be able to understand conversations and respond well, except complex topic.



My previous AL DM allows me to understand quest briefing, conversation with NPC, without me having the proficiency in Common language. However, as I'm going to try different DMs, I'm unsure that such thing should be allowed: understand a language you're not proficient with.



Is there a rule in the book that supports that PC can understand typical conversation in a language they're not proficient with?



If yes, then what is the point of having language proficiency? (But that might be better for other question)










share|improve this question













My character was raised by elves and never learned Common language. Throughout his adventures, he had learned some words of Common, here and there, mainly daily words, like "name", greetings, until at least he (I think) should be able to understand conversations and respond well, except complex topic.



My previous AL DM allows me to understand quest briefing, conversation with NPC, without me having the proficiency in Common language. However, as I'm going to try different DMs, I'm unsure that such thing should be allowed: understand a language you're not proficient with.



Is there a rule in the book that supports that PC can understand typical conversation in a language they're not proficient with?



If yes, then what is the point of having language proficiency? (But that might be better for other question)







dnd-5e dnd-adventurers-league languages






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share|improve this question










asked Dec 2 at 10:47









Vylix

9,558238124




9,558238124








  • 7




    how come your character doesn't speak Common? Since all races do (even the monstrous races from VGtM), I assume it's by choice / for roleplaying reasons?
    – PixelMaster
    Dec 2 at 10:51








  • 2




    @PixelMaster yes, exactly.
    – Vylix
    Dec 2 at 11:27






  • 2




    You want a gimmick without the mechanical consequences of it?
    – András
    Dec 2 at 11:28










  • @András nah, the DM sick of me asking each time to other character, so he just narrate it so.
    – Vylix
    Dec 2 at 11:31














  • 7




    how come your character doesn't speak Common? Since all races do (even the monstrous races from VGtM), I assume it's by choice / for roleplaying reasons?
    – PixelMaster
    Dec 2 at 10:51








  • 2




    @PixelMaster yes, exactly.
    – Vylix
    Dec 2 at 11:27






  • 2




    You want a gimmick without the mechanical consequences of it?
    – András
    Dec 2 at 11:28










  • @András nah, the DM sick of me asking each time to other character, so he just narrate it so.
    – Vylix
    Dec 2 at 11:31








7




7




how come your character doesn't speak Common? Since all races do (even the monstrous races from VGtM), I assume it's by choice / for roleplaying reasons?
– PixelMaster
Dec 2 at 10:51






how come your character doesn't speak Common? Since all races do (even the monstrous races from VGtM), I assume it's by choice / for roleplaying reasons?
– PixelMaster
Dec 2 at 10:51






2




2




@PixelMaster yes, exactly.
– Vylix
Dec 2 at 11:27




@PixelMaster yes, exactly.
– Vylix
Dec 2 at 11:27




2




2




You want a gimmick without the mechanical consequences of it?
– András
Dec 2 at 11:28




You want a gimmick without the mechanical consequences of it?
– András
Dec 2 at 11:28












@András nah, the DM sick of me asking each time to other character, so he just narrate it so.
– Vylix
Dec 2 at 11:31




@András nah, the DM sick of me asking each time to other character, so he just narrate it so.
– Vylix
Dec 2 at 11:31










4 Answers
4






active

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up vote
27
down vote













Normally speaking, no, there are no rules that support that you can understand a language you are not proficient in. You might roll some Intelligence or Wisdom checks to figure out what's going on, but you won't get it.



However, in the specific case of Common, there is also no way within the rules to not speak the language, so it's pretty easy to rule that your PC can understand typical conversation in that language.



After all, going by pure mechanics, especially in AL, you do speak Common, because it's just a thing you get automatically.






share|improve this answer

















  • 7




    Just to bring it home: because you mechanically speak Common by default, it is entirely within the RAW for you to play a character that speaks Common poorly.
    – Pink Sweetener
    Dec 2 at 20:31


















up vote
4
down vote













Your DDAL character must be proficient in Common



DDAL DMs are not allowed to make or use house rules. For the purposes of character creation, your table DM does not exist: the DDAL rules describe the character creation rules that apply to all DDAL characters and make no provisions for dropping language proficiencies.






share|improve this answer




























    up vote
    -1
    down vote













    You can understand any language by using magic



    If you are a Bard, Sorcerer, Warlock, Wizard, Arcane Trickster Rogue or Eldritch Knight Fighter, you can use the ritual spell comprehend languages (PHB, page 224).




    For the duration, you understand the literal meaning of any spoken language that you hear. You also understand any written language that you see, but you must be touching the surface on which the words are written. It takes about 1 minute to read one page of text.




    If your character can't cast comprehend languages, you could try finding a helm of comprehending languages (DMG, page 173) which lets you cast it:




    While wearing this helm, you can use an action to cast the comprehend languages spell from it at will.







    share|improve this answer























    • Is the answer wrong? I know it's not complete, but thought it would be helpful at least
      – ONOZ
      Dec 2 at 13:47






    • 1




      I don't think OP is looking for a way to understand common, but asking if they can simply understand some language without proficiency or other mechanics.
      – NautArch
      Dec 2 at 15:07










    • I see. Could I create a new question asking what I thought the question was ("How can I ..."), and move my answer there?
      – ONOZ
      Dec 2 at 15:32










    • @ONOZ: Yes, that seems fine.
      – V2Blast
      Dec 2 at 19:15


















    up vote
    -1
    down vote













    No, not by RAW. However, in a non-AL game, given enough time, you can gain proficiency with a language.



    Xanathar's Guide To Everything has rules for this in the Downtime section, under Training. It states the following:




    TRAINING



    Given enough free time and the services of an instructor, a character can learn a language or pick up proficiency with a tool.
    Resources. Receiving training in a language or tool typically takes at least ten workweeks, but this time is reduced by a number of workweeks equal to the character’s Intelligence modifier (an Intelligence penalty doesn’t increase the time needed). Training costs 25 GP per workweek.
    Complications. [...]




    You can easily modify this and allow listening in to conversations to count as a few workdays for the purpose of this "downtime" activity. That is, however, not legal in AL (since it'd be a house rule, which are not permitted). Otherwise, your DM still has to explicitly approve this modification (obviously).



    Similarly, your DM could rule that (regardless of whether listening to conversations reduces the required downtime) the closer you get to the end of your language-learning-process, the more pieces of conversations you understand. Again, this is not supported by RAW, so it's not legal in AL.



    On a side note, bear in mind that, according to XGtE, you should avoid too many breaks in between spending your downtime:




    The days of an activity don’t need to be consecutive; you can spread them over a longer period of time than is required for the activity. But that period of time should be no more than twice as long as the required time; otherwise you should introduce extra complications (see below) and possibly double the activity’s costs to represent the inefficiency of the character’s progress.







    share|improve this answer



















    • 1




      I'm not sure why my answer got downvoted. Would you care to elaborate?
      – PixelMaster
      Dec 2 at 12:48






    • 1




      It may be because this is an AL question and you end your answer with being unsure if your idea is legal in AL.
      – NautArch
      Dec 2 at 14:10










    • @NautArch I adressed the issue. I've never played AL (it's too restrictive for my taste), and I previously (!) didn't have the time to read the FAQ etc.
      – PixelMaster
      Dec 2 at 15:19






    • 1




      If you haven't played with a given ruleset, it is poor practice to answer the question. Similar to how you shouldn't questions for systems you haven't played
      – David Coffron
      Dec 2 at 17:26










    • @DavidCoffron Adventurer's League isn't that distant from the D&D ruleset. In fact, it is the D&D ruleset, with a lot less DM adjudication. By definition, everything relevant for AL has to be located in either the general D&D ruleset or the official AL documents (Player Guide, FAQ, etc.). Therefore, I don't see what more qualification is needed to answer an AL question other than reading those documents (which I did).
      – PixelMaster
      Dec 2 at 17:56













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    4 Answers
    4






    active

    oldest

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    4 Answers
    4






    active

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    active

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    up vote
    27
    down vote













    Normally speaking, no, there are no rules that support that you can understand a language you are not proficient in. You might roll some Intelligence or Wisdom checks to figure out what's going on, but you won't get it.



    However, in the specific case of Common, there is also no way within the rules to not speak the language, so it's pretty easy to rule that your PC can understand typical conversation in that language.



    After all, going by pure mechanics, especially in AL, you do speak Common, because it's just a thing you get automatically.






    share|improve this answer

















    • 7




      Just to bring it home: because you mechanically speak Common by default, it is entirely within the RAW for you to play a character that speaks Common poorly.
      – Pink Sweetener
      Dec 2 at 20:31















    up vote
    27
    down vote













    Normally speaking, no, there are no rules that support that you can understand a language you are not proficient in. You might roll some Intelligence or Wisdom checks to figure out what's going on, but you won't get it.



    However, in the specific case of Common, there is also no way within the rules to not speak the language, so it's pretty easy to rule that your PC can understand typical conversation in that language.



    After all, going by pure mechanics, especially in AL, you do speak Common, because it's just a thing you get automatically.






    share|improve this answer

















    • 7




      Just to bring it home: because you mechanically speak Common by default, it is entirely within the RAW for you to play a character that speaks Common poorly.
      – Pink Sweetener
      Dec 2 at 20:31













    up vote
    27
    down vote










    up vote
    27
    down vote









    Normally speaking, no, there are no rules that support that you can understand a language you are not proficient in. You might roll some Intelligence or Wisdom checks to figure out what's going on, but you won't get it.



    However, in the specific case of Common, there is also no way within the rules to not speak the language, so it's pretty easy to rule that your PC can understand typical conversation in that language.



    After all, going by pure mechanics, especially in AL, you do speak Common, because it's just a thing you get automatically.






    share|improve this answer












    Normally speaking, no, there are no rules that support that you can understand a language you are not proficient in. You might roll some Intelligence or Wisdom checks to figure out what's going on, but you won't get it.



    However, in the specific case of Common, there is also no way within the rules to not speak the language, so it's pretty easy to rule that your PC can understand typical conversation in that language.



    After all, going by pure mechanics, especially in AL, you do speak Common, because it's just a thing you get automatically.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Dec 2 at 10:59









    Erik

    43.4k11155225




    43.4k11155225








    • 7




      Just to bring it home: because you mechanically speak Common by default, it is entirely within the RAW for you to play a character that speaks Common poorly.
      – Pink Sweetener
      Dec 2 at 20:31














    • 7




      Just to bring it home: because you mechanically speak Common by default, it is entirely within the RAW for you to play a character that speaks Common poorly.
      – Pink Sweetener
      Dec 2 at 20:31








    7




    7




    Just to bring it home: because you mechanically speak Common by default, it is entirely within the RAW for you to play a character that speaks Common poorly.
    – Pink Sweetener
    Dec 2 at 20:31




    Just to bring it home: because you mechanically speak Common by default, it is entirely within the RAW for you to play a character that speaks Common poorly.
    – Pink Sweetener
    Dec 2 at 20:31












    up vote
    4
    down vote













    Your DDAL character must be proficient in Common



    DDAL DMs are not allowed to make or use house rules. For the purposes of character creation, your table DM does not exist: the DDAL rules describe the character creation rules that apply to all DDAL characters and make no provisions for dropping language proficiencies.






    share|improve this answer

























      up vote
      4
      down vote













      Your DDAL character must be proficient in Common



      DDAL DMs are not allowed to make or use house rules. For the purposes of character creation, your table DM does not exist: the DDAL rules describe the character creation rules that apply to all DDAL characters and make no provisions for dropping language proficiencies.






      share|improve this answer























        up vote
        4
        down vote










        up vote
        4
        down vote









        Your DDAL character must be proficient in Common



        DDAL DMs are not allowed to make or use house rules. For the purposes of character creation, your table DM does not exist: the DDAL rules describe the character creation rules that apply to all DDAL characters and make no provisions for dropping language proficiencies.






        share|improve this answer












        Your DDAL character must be proficient in Common



        DDAL DMs are not allowed to make or use house rules. For the purposes of character creation, your table DM does not exist: the DDAL rules describe the character creation rules that apply to all DDAL characters and make no provisions for dropping language proficiencies.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Dec 3 at 14:41









        T.J.L.

        28.3k594150




        28.3k594150






















            up vote
            -1
            down vote













            You can understand any language by using magic



            If you are a Bard, Sorcerer, Warlock, Wizard, Arcane Trickster Rogue or Eldritch Knight Fighter, you can use the ritual spell comprehend languages (PHB, page 224).




            For the duration, you understand the literal meaning of any spoken language that you hear. You also understand any written language that you see, but you must be touching the surface on which the words are written. It takes about 1 minute to read one page of text.




            If your character can't cast comprehend languages, you could try finding a helm of comprehending languages (DMG, page 173) which lets you cast it:




            While wearing this helm, you can use an action to cast the comprehend languages spell from it at will.







            share|improve this answer























            • Is the answer wrong? I know it's not complete, but thought it would be helpful at least
              – ONOZ
              Dec 2 at 13:47






            • 1




              I don't think OP is looking for a way to understand common, but asking if they can simply understand some language without proficiency or other mechanics.
              – NautArch
              Dec 2 at 15:07










            • I see. Could I create a new question asking what I thought the question was ("How can I ..."), and move my answer there?
              – ONOZ
              Dec 2 at 15:32










            • @ONOZ: Yes, that seems fine.
              – V2Blast
              Dec 2 at 19:15















            up vote
            -1
            down vote













            You can understand any language by using magic



            If you are a Bard, Sorcerer, Warlock, Wizard, Arcane Trickster Rogue or Eldritch Knight Fighter, you can use the ritual spell comprehend languages (PHB, page 224).




            For the duration, you understand the literal meaning of any spoken language that you hear. You also understand any written language that you see, but you must be touching the surface on which the words are written. It takes about 1 minute to read one page of text.




            If your character can't cast comprehend languages, you could try finding a helm of comprehending languages (DMG, page 173) which lets you cast it:




            While wearing this helm, you can use an action to cast the comprehend languages spell from it at will.







            share|improve this answer























            • Is the answer wrong? I know it's not complete, but thought it would be helpful at least
              – ONOZ
              Dec 2 at 13:47






            • 1




              I don't think OP is looking for a way to understand common, but asking if they can simply understand some language without proficiency or other mechanics.
              – NautArch
              Dec 2 at 15:07










            • I see. Could I create a new question asking what I thought the question was ("How can I ..."), and move my answer there?
              – ONOZ
              Dec 2 at 15:32










            • @ONOZ: Yes, that seems fine.
              – V2Blast
              Dec 2 at 19:15













            up vote
            -1
            down vote










            up vote
            -1
            down vote









            You can understand any language by using magic



            If you are a Bard, Sorcerer, Warlock, Wizard, Arcane Trickster Rogue or Eldritch Knight Fighter, you can use the ritual spell comprehend languages (PHB, page 224).




            For the duration, you understand the literal meaning of any spoken language that you hear. You also understand any written language that you see, but you must be touching the surface on which the words are written. It takes about 1 minute to read one page of text.




            If your character can't cast comprehend languages, you could try finding a helm of comprehending languages (DMG, page 173) which lets you cast it:




            While wearing this helm, you can use an action to cast the comprehend languages spell from it at will.







            share|improve this answer














            You can understand any language by using magic



            If you are a Bard, Sorcerer, Warlock, Wizard, Arcane Trickster Rogue or Eldritch Knight Fighter, you can use the ritual spell comprehend languages (PHB, page 224).




            For the duration, you understand the literal meaning of any spoken language that you hear. You also understand any written language that you see, but you must be touching the surface on which the words are written. It takes about 1 minute to read one page of text.




            If your character can't cast comprehend languages, you could try finding a helm of comprehending languages (DMG, page 173) which lets you cast it:




            While wearing this helm, you can use an action to cast the comprehend languages spell from it at will.








            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Dec 2 at 19:18









            V2Blast

            18.8k251117




            18.8k251117










            answered Dec 2 at 13:32









            ONOZ

            6181213




            6181213












            • Is the answer wrong? I know it's not complete, but thought it would be helpful at least
              – ONOZ
              Dec 2 at 13:47






            • 1




              I don't think OP is looking for a way to understand common, but asking if they can simply understand some language without proficiency or other mechanics.
              – NautArch
              Dec 2 at 15:07










            • I see. Could I create a new question asking what I thought the question was ("How can I ..."), and move my answer there?
              – ONOZ
              Dec 2 at 15:32










            • @ONOZ: Yes, that seems fine.
              – V2Blast
              Dec 2 at 19:15


















            • Is the answer wrong? I know it's not complete, but thought it would be helpful at least
              – ONOZ
              Dec 2 at 13:47






            • 1




              I don't think OP is looking for a way to understand common, but asking if they can simply understand some language without proficiency or other mechanics.
              – NautArch
              Dec 2 at 15:07










            • I see. Could I create a new question asking what I thought the question was ("How can I ..."), and move my answer there?
              – ONOZ
              Dec 2 at 15:32










            • @ONOZ: Yes, that seems fine.
              – V2Blast
              Dec 2 at 19:15
















            Is the answer wrong? I know it's not complete, but thought it would be helpful at least
            – ONOZ
            Dec 2 at 13:47




            Is the answer wrong? I know it's not complete, but thought it would be helpful at least
            – ONOZ
            Dec 2 at 13:47




            1




            1




            I don't think OP is looking for a way to understand common, but asking if they can simply understand some language without proficiency or other mechanics.
            – NautArch
            Dec 2 at 15:07




            I don't think OP is looking for a way to understand common, but asking if they can simply understand some language without proficiency or other mechanics.
            – NautArch
            Dec 2 at 15:07












            I see. Could I create a new question asking what I thought the question was ("How can I ..."), and move my answer there?
            – ONOZ
            Dec 2 at 15:32




            I see. Could I create a new question asking what I thought the question was ("How can I ..."), and move my answer there?
            – ONOZ
            Dec 2 at 15:32












            @ONOZ: Yes, that seems fine.
            – V2Blast
            Dec 2 at 19:15




            @ONOZ: Yes, that seems fine.
            – V2Blast
            Dec 2 at 19:15










            up vote
            -1
            down vote













            No, not by RAW. However, in a non-AL game, given enough time, you can gain proficiency with a language.



            Xanathar's Guide To Everything has rules for this in the Downtime section, under Training. It states the following:




            TRAINING



            Given enough free time and the services of an instructor, a character can learn a language or pick up proficiency with a tool.
            Resources. Receiving training in a language or tool typically takes at least ten workweeks, but this time is reduced by a number of workweeks equal to the character’s Intelligence modifier (an Intelligence penalty doesn’t increase the time needed). Training costs 25 GP per workweek.
            Complications. [...]




            You can easily modify this and allow listening in to conversations to count as a few workdays for the purpose of this "downtime" activity. That is, however, not legal in AL (since it'd be a house rule, which are not permitted). Otherwise, your DM still has to explicitly approve this modification (obviously).



            Similarly, your DM could rule that (regardless of whether listening to conversations reduces the required downtime) the closer you get to the end of your language-learning-process, the more pieces of conversations you understand. Again, this is not supported by RAW, so it's not legal in AL.



            On a side note, bear in mind that, according to XGtE, you should avoid too many breaks in between spending your downtime:




            The days of an activity don’t need to be consecutive; you can spread them over a longer period of time than is required for the activity. But that period of time should be no more than twice as long as the required time; otherwise you should introduce extra complications (see below) and possibly double the activity’s costs to represent the inefficiency of the character’s progress.







            share|improve this answer



















            • 1




              I'm not sure why my answer got downvoted. Would you care to elaborate?
              – PixelMaster
              Dec 2 at 12:48






            • 1




              It may be because this is an AL question and you end your answer with being unsure if your idea is legal in AL.
              – NautArch
              Dec 2 at 14:10










            • @NautArch I adressed the issue. I've never played AL (it's too restrictive for my taste), and I previously (!) didn't have the time to read the FAQ etc.
              – PixelMaster
              Dec 2 at 15:19






            • 1




              If you haven't played with a given ruleset, it is poor practice to answer the question. Similar to how you shouldn't questions for systems you haven't played
              – David Coffron
              Dec 2 at 17:26










            • @DavidCoffron Adventurer's League isn't that distant from the D&D ruleset. In fact, it is the D&D ruleset, with a lot less DM adjudication. By definition, everything relevant for AL has to be located in either the general D&D ruleset or the official AL documents (Player Guide, FAQ, etc.). Therefore, I don't see what more qualification is needed to answer an AL question other than reading those documents (which I did).
              – PixelMaster
              Dec 2 at 17:56

















            up vote
            -1
            down vote













            No, not by RAW. However, in a non-AL game, given enough time, you can gain proficiency with a language.



            Xanathar's Guide To Everything has rules for this in the Downtime section, under Training. It states the following:




            TRAINING



            Given enough free time and the services of an instructor, a character can learn a language or pick up proficiency with a tool.
            Resources. Receiving training in a language or tool typically takes at least ten workweeks, but this time is reduced by a number of workweeks equal to the character’s Intelligence modifier (an Intelligence penalty doesn’t increase the time needed). Training costs 25 GP per workweek.
            Complications. [...]




            You can easily modify this and allow listening in to conversations to count as a few workdays for the purpose of this "downtime" activity. That is, however, not legal in AL (since it'd be a house rule, which are not permitted). Otherwise, your DM still has to explicitly approve this modification (obviously).



            Similarly, your DM could rule that (regardless of whether listening to conversations reduces the required downtime) the closer you get to the end of your language-learning-process, the more pieces of conversations you understand. Again, this is not supported by RAW, so it's not legal in AL.



            On a side note, bear in mind that, according to XGtE, you should avoid too many breaks in between spending your downtime:




            The days of an activity don’t need to be consecutive; you can spread them over a longer period of time than is required for the activity. But that period of time should be no more than twice as long as the required time; otherwise you should introduce extra complications (see below) and possibly double the activity’s costs to represent the inefficiency of the character’s progress.







            share|improve this answer



















            • 1




              I'm not sure why my answer got downvoted. Would you care to elaborate?
              – PixelMaster
              Dec 2 at 12:48






            • 1




              It may be because this is an AL question and you end your answer with being unsure if your idea is legal in AL.
              – NautArch
              Dec 2 at 14:10










            • @NautArch I adressed the issue. I've never played AL (it's too restrictive for my taste), and I previously (!) didn't have the time to read the FAQ etc.
              – PixelMaster
              Dec 2 at 15:19






            • 1




              If you haven't played with a given ruleset, it is poor practice to answer the question. Similar to how you shouldn't questions for systems you haven't played
              – David Coffron
              Dec 2 at 17:26










            • @DavidCoffron Adventurer's League isn't that distant from the D&D ruleset. In fact, it is the D&D ruleset, with a lot less DM adjudication. By definition, everything relevant for AL has to be located in either the general D&D ruleset or the official AL documents (Player Guide, FAQ, etc.). Therefore, I don't see what more qualification is needed to answer an AL question other than reading those documents (which I did).
              – PixelMaster
              Dec 2 at 17:56















            up vote
            -1
            down vote










            up vote
            -1
            down vote









            No, not by RAW. However, in a non-AL game, given enough time, you can gain proficiency with a language.



            Xanathar's Guide To Everything has rules for this in the Downtime section, under Training. It states the following:




            TRAINING



            Given enough free time and the services of an instructor, a character can learn a language or pick up proficiency with a tool.
            Resources. Receiving training in a language or tool typically takes at least ten workweeks, but this time is reduced by a number of workweeks equal to the character’s Intelligence modifier (an Intelligence penalty doesn’t increase the time needed). Training costs 25 GP per workweek.
            Complications. [...]




            You can easily modify this and allow listening in to conversations to count as a few workdays for the purpose of this "downtime" activity. That is, however, not legal in AL (since it'd be a house rule, which are not permitted). Otherwise, your DM still has to explicitly approve this modification (obviously).



            Similarly, your DM could rule that (regardless of whether listening to conversations reduces the required downtime) the closer you get to the end of your language-learning-process, the more pieces of conversations you understand. Again, this is not supported by RAW, so it's not legal in AL.



            On a side note, bear in mind that, according to XGtE, you should avoid too many breaks in between spending your downtime:




            The days of an activity don’t need to be consecutive; you can spread them over a longer period of time than is required for the activity. But that period of time should be no more than twice as long as the required time; otherwise you should introduce extra complications (see below) and possibly double the activity’s costs to represent the inefficiency of the character’s progress.







            share|improve this answer














            No, not by RAW. However, in a non-AL game, given enough time, you can gain proficiency with a language.



            Xanathar's Guide To Everything has rules for this in the Downtime section, under Training. It states the following:




            TRAINING



            Given enough free time and the services of an instructor, a character can learn a language or pick up proficiency with a tool.
            Resources. Receiving training in a language or tool typically takes at least ten workweeks, but this time is reduced by a number of workweeks equal to the character’s Intelligence modifier (an Intelligence penalty doesn’t increase the time needed). Training costs 25 GP per workweek.
            Complications. [...]




            You can easily modify this and allow listening in to conversations to count as a few workdays for the purpose of this "downtime" activity. That is, however, not legal in AL (since it'd be a house rule, which are not permitted). Otherwise, your DM still has to explicitly approve this modification (obviously).



            Similarly, your DM could rule that (regardless of whether listening to conversations reduces the required downtime) the closer you get to the end of your language-learning-process, the more pieces of conversations you understand. Again, this is not supported by RAW, so it's not legal in AL.



            On a side note, bear in mind that, according to XGtE, you should avoid too many breaks in between spending your downtime:




            The days of an activity don’t need to be consecutive; you can spread them over a longer period of time than is required for the activity. But that period of time should be no more than twice as long as the required time; otherwise you should introduce extra complications (see below) and possibly double the activity’s costs to represent the inefficiency of the character’s progress.








            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Dec 3 at 16:40









            Rubiksmoose

            46.5k6233355




            46.5k6233355










            answered Dec 2 at 11:07









            PixelMaster

            8,0823089




            8,0823089








            • 1




              I'm not sure why my answer got downvoted. Would you care to elaborate?
              – PixelMaster
              Dec 2 at 12:48






            • 1




              It may be because this is an AL question and you end your answer with being unsure if your idea is legal in AL.
              – NautArch
              Dec 2 at 14:10










            • @NautArch I adressed the issue. I've never played AL (it's too restrictive for my taste), and I previously (!) didn't have the time to read the FAQ etc.
              – PixelMaster
              Dec 2 at 15:19






            • 1




              If you haven't played with a given ruleset, it is poor practice to answer the question. Similar to how you shouldn't questions for systems you haven't played
              – David Coffron
              Dec 2 at 17:26










            • @DavidCoffron Adventurer's League isn't that distant from the D&D ruleset. In fact, it is the D&D ruleset, with a lot less DM adjudication. By definition, everything relevant for AL has to be located in either the general D&D ruleset or the official AL documents (Player Guide, FAQ, etc.). Therefore, I don't see what more qualification is needed to answer an AL question other than reading those documents (which I did).
              – PixelMaster
              Dec 2 at 17:56
















            • 1




              I'm not sure why my answer got downvoted. Would you care to elaborate?
              – PixelMaster
              Dec 2 at 12:48






            • 1




              It may be because this is an AL question and you end your answer with being unsure if your idea is legal in AL.
              – NautArch
              Dec 2 at 14:10










            • @NautArch I adressed the issue. I've never played AL (it's too restrictive for my taste), and I previously (!) didn't have the time to read the FAQ etc.
              – PixelMaster
              Dec 2 at 15:19






            • 1




              If you haven't played with a given ruleset, it is poor practice to answer the question. Similar to how you shouldn't questions for systems you haven't played
              – David Coffron
              Dec 2 at 17:26










            • @DavidCoffron Adventurer's League isn't that distant from the D&D ruleset. In fact, it is the D&D ruleset, with a lot less DM adjudication. By definition, everything relevant for AL has to be located in either the general D&D ruleset or the official AL documents (Player Guide, FAQ, etc.). Therefore, I don't see what more qualification is needed to answer an AL question other than reading those documents (which I did).
              – PixelMaster
              Dec 2 at 17:56










            1




            1




            I'm not sure why my answer got downvoted. Would you care to elaborate?
            – PixelMaster
            Dec 2 at 12:48




            I'm not sure why my answer got downvoted. Would you care to elaborate?
            – PixelMaster
            Dec 2 at 12:48




            1




            1




            It may be because this is an AL question and you end your answer with being unsure if your idea is legal in AL.
            – NautArch
            Dec 2 at 14:10




            It may be because this is an AL question and you end your answer with being unsure if your idea is legal in AL.
            – NautArch
            Dec 2 at 14:10












            @NautArch I adressed the issue. I've never played AL (it's too restrictive for my taste), and I previously (!) didn't have the time to read the FAQ etc.
            – PixelMaster
            Dec 2 at 15:19




            @NautArch I adressed the issue. I've never played AL (it's too restrictive for my taste), and I previously (!) didn't have the time to read the FAQ etc.
            – PixelMaster
            Dec 2 at 15:19




            1




            1




            If you haven't played with a given ruleset, it is poor practice to answer the question. Similar to how you shouldn't questions for systems you haven't played
            – David Coffron
            Dec 2 at 17:26




            If you haven't played with a given ruleset, it is poor practice to answer the question. Similar to how you shouldn't questions for systems you haven't played
            – David Coffron
            Dec 2 at 17:26












            @DavidCoffron Adventurer's League isn't that distant from the D&D ruleset. In fact, it is the D&D ruleset, with a lot less DM adjudication. By definition, everything relevant for AL has to be located in either the general D&D ruleset or the official AL documents (Player Guide, FAQ, etc.). Therefore, I don't see what more qualification is needed to answer an AL question other than reading those documents (which I did).
            – PixelMaster
            Dec 2 at 17:56






            @DavidCoffron Adventurer's League isn't that distant from the D&D ruleset. In fact, it is the D&D ruleset, with a lot less DM adjudication. By definition, everything relevant for AL has to be located in either the general D&D ruleset or the official AL documents (Player Guide, FAQ, etc.). Therefore, I don't see what more qualification is needed to answer an AL question other than reading those documents (which I did).
            – PixelMaster
            Dec 2 at 17:56




















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