I'm not sure which language I should learn?

Hey,

As I mentioned before, I wanted to learn a language during the holidays, just for fun. But I'm still searching.

Many languages ​​put me off because of the accentuation and the speed of speaking, for example Spanish.

How do I find a suitable language? Which one is easy to learn?

(4 votes)
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AstridDerPu
1 year ago

Hello,

here are some ideas about the choice of language:

Spanish as language m. E. the Frenchthe ranks in industry and industry have now passed and are spoken much more frequently than the world Italian.

Hard to come – due to the different letters or the characters but not necessarily simple – are Chinese, Russian and Japanese.

The choice of a language will always remain your very personal choice, in which you should have the following points:

– Your job request: What language is most important for this?

– Your personal, private interests:

– Which country do you prefer to make holiday?

– To or in which country do you have the closest relationships or most friends and/or relationship?

– Which country is your heart most likely?

– What language do you find most support in your family, your friends and acquaintances, because someone has already learned or speaks?

For me, for example, neither Japanese nor Chinese could be considered nor Korean. I worked for a Korean company just over 40 years ago and I imagined I had to (and why) Korean learning. After a semester Korean at the VHS I gave up my project

The language of my choice – next English and French – was Swedish, which I can now speak better than French and only recommend, because

1. it is actually even simpler than English (The verbs are in all people, in all times (no he/she/it has to be with). The sentence is very similar in German.)

2. it also applies to Denmark and Norway; Other than FinnishThis is difficult because it belongs to another, namely the Finnish-Ugrian language family. In addition, there are 15 cases in Finnish, but in German only 4 and with these we are already hard enough.

I wish you a good hand in your decision and good luck and success for your further school and professional future.

AstridDerPu

AstridDerPu
1 year ago
Reply to  AstridDerPu

Thanks for the star. ☺️

uhyrius
1 year ago

“Just for fun” and you want to reach a lot on holiday and it shouldn’t be so difficult that I take your questions on the subject. Then I would recommend Italian. It is spoken by more people than Dutch, which is perhaps even simpler (because of the close relationship with German), but also spelling and pronunciation are somewhat more different and perhaps more unambiguous. There is no second language that is as clear and clear as Italian. I can find the title by googling with parts of the text of a song I have heard. This is not the case with Spanish or French, and it is only because I have learned that in English.

Izaya675
1 year ago

None is easy but Dutch recommend is relatively easy to learn because it is like German only with some other words

ymarc
1 year ago

French and Italian or Latin, among others

latricolore, UserMod Light
Reply to  ymarc

🙂

latricolore, UserMod Light

Many languages are scaring me because of the concretes and speed when speaking, e.g. Spanish.

I don’t know what you’re talking about, but the speed seems fast to me in any language you don’t know. You don’t hear when a word ends and the new one starts.

Why do you want any Learning language? If you don’t really irritate, I leave it. After all, there is a great danger that the first (grammatic) hurdle is thrown. 😉

latricolore, UserMod Light
Reply to  Great03

But you’re learning with every new vocabulary as you say. 🙂
I really wouldn’t do that.
In addition, most words on the second last syllable are emphasized:
Person – persona.
And other concretes are characterized by accents.

You can also listen to the debate – e.g. at pons

https://de.pons.com/%C3%BCversetzung/deutsch-spanisch/Butter

and also forvo

https://de.forvo.com/word/mantequilla/#es

And finally, there’s another one. 👍

SoHardToBeNice
1 year ago

I’m not getting warm with Spanish either.

I have fun learning Norwegian.

The Norwegians have a great advantage because they understand both the Danes and the Sweden. The Swedes do with the Danes, however, hard and different.

So you basically get 3 languages in one because it is the middle thing between Swedish and Danish.

SoHardToBeNice
1 year ago
Reply to  Great03

Many things remind you of English words, sometimes also Germans.

Brød = bread

Eple = apple (kling like Apple)

The position is also as in German.

In English you often say things differently.

Like “Sometimes the sun is red”

In German this means “sometimes the sun is red”

but you would say it in German as “The sun is sometimes red”.

In Norwegian, you would build the sentence like in German.

I think that’s quite simple. And the debate is not so hard either.

But it must be said that I am still at the beginning.

BSHotCrow
1 year ago

If you like Latain there are the words quite similar otherwise I would

there are no special signs like in French I learn French because of school but if you don’t like latain I would suggest you Italian

latricolore, UserMod Light
Reply to  BSHotCrow

I would be Italian that there are no special signs like in French

You think so. Accents?

Of course we have the Italians too:

  • è
  • perché
  • and
  • giù
AriZona04
1 year ago

Spanish is also not faster at speed than other languages! Spanish is – on the contrary – rather easy to learn. I would definitely recommend the language.

Speed comes with routine. As always and with everything in life: if you are sure, everything goes faster. You can start slowly – is nothing against it!

AriZona04
1 year ago
Reply to  Great03

Hmh – yes. We also speak so quickly; without having clicked on your link. Just have to listen to yourself. And you learn that while you are learning.

bailandoxaqui
1 year ago

But you wrote that when you speak Spanish, you speak Spanish. It’s not like that, even from the speed where you generally mean you’re talking so fast.

Just click here and talk to: https://m.youtube.com/shorts/0MyPpT7sP4M

AriZona04
1 year ago

Our conversation was about the speed of speech – not about whether I am now a Spaniard.

bailandoxaqui
1 year ago

No foreign language speaks like a Spanish. The articulation of almost all consonants and the vocal system are opposed. Also the rhythm, melody and word fusion.

AriZona04
1 year ago

I learned Spanish. If you can speak the language, you just talk like the Spanish. Logical.

bailandoxaqui
1 year ago

Spanish is the fastest spoken language with Japanese. It is spoken much faster than German.

German on TV usually sounds like this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qA6haHNoW_E

Spanish on TV more like this: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/0MyPpT7sP4M