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What is the Easiest Language to Learn?Being the language lovers that we are... A place to talk about, or write in languages other than Spanish and English. |
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#11
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Grammar in any language will give you a headache, but it will help you communicate better in your own language. If you learn it well and apply what you learn to how you speak and write, you will sound smart. In fact, using grammar well may be a sign of intelligence. Grammar knowlege is even more important to know when you learn a second language.
Simple English is easy to learn. Most verbs are regular, and the pronoun lets you know the person. If you dig deeper, it becomes increasingly difficult.
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Me ayuda si corrige mis errores. Gracias. |
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#12
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The amount of vocabulary drives me nuts.
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I'd be very thankful, if you'd correct my mistakes in English/Spanish. |
#13
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Spanish is much easier to spell than say Russian or Japanese because Spanish uses the familiar Roman alphabet. The fact that a language like Russian uses an unfamiliar alphabet causes the average language-learner to place it automatically in the category of a difficult language. Perhaps Russian is really more difficult for English speakers to learn than Spanish, but this writing difference is only a superficial and temporary obstacle, having little to do with the real difficulties. |
#14
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I would think simple English would be the easiest. Easier conjugation of verbs, no gender, etc... However, English is VERY nuanced with tons of words that all mean similar things with slight tweaks.
I personally find Spanish easier than French, so I would vote Spanish as the 2nd. I actually found Italian to not be too bad either, but still found Spanish as the easiest of the 3, but I was biased since French and Italian came later in life. |
#15
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1. German
It's great you don't even have to think about it. 2. Italian I had classes before in Latin, Spanish and French, thus it's like learning the differences rather than the actual language. But nevertheless to understand so much so quickly is just rewarding and encouraging. 3. Latin No talking involved. Purely textual work. Loved it! The most difficult language of all (my limited) times is Portuguese. While travelling through the vast echoes of its authors from around the world, its pronunciation is killing me. I don't understand a word been said and my tongue is incapable of producing any. |
#16
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Spanish for just one example has only two contractions al and del. a+el=al, de+el=del. Now look at all the contractions in Italian. il lo l' la i gli le a at, to al allo all' alla ai agli alle da from, by dal dallo dall' dalla dai dagli dalle di of del dello dell' della dei degli delle in in nel nello nell' nella nei negli nelle su on sul sullo sull' sulla sui sugli sulle con with col collo coll' colla coi cogli colle Note: The only contractions for con that are still used nowadays are col and coi. But even these contractions are optional. Last edited by Villa; August 16, 2013 at 09:53 PM. |
#17
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Depends on the language you know (mother tongue) and those who are in use - foreign languages - you know.
If you know English very well you should find languages with the same roots as English. Or very high similarity in words like Spanish. Possible, posible, impossible, imposible,... From that you can start learning every romanic language you'd like because they are similarities in French, Portuguese (Brazilian and Portugal), Italian, Romanic, Latinamerican Spanish. If you're German and know English you could start with Dutch (both languages influenced the Dutch language), but also start learning Romanic languages as well. I am just curious and I really don't know if I'll ever manage to learn all the language but I'd like to learn (at least the basic) with maybe a A2 level (European framework for languages) in: Spanish / latinamerican, too Portuguese / Brazilian French Italian Just for the fun of it and to keep my brain working I'd like to check in at: Polish Russian Japanese (I already checked but it was weird... a weird and hard time for me, too... will check later again...) For people with good English knowledge I'd recommend the app Duolingo, which is completely free and awesome. You can learn German, Spanish, French, Italian,... more languages are coming sooner or later. |
#18
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I'd be very thankful, if you'd correct my mistakes in English/Spanish. |
#19
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Haha, awesome, but wrong.
With the right technique every language could be easier to learn. Which means not easy at all, but easier than with the wrong techniques. ;-) Get the right technique attached to your brain, then be ready to learn. :-D |
#20
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German humour?
It's a satire and therefore not to be taken seriously. Of course some or more things are not true but that's not the meaning of this. To be honest I don't believe there's the "best" technique to learn a language. You just have to look for the technique that works best for you.
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I'd be very thankful, if you'd correct my mistakes in English/Spanish. |
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