Whiner. :angry:Ban everyone that suggested a programming language
Whiner. :angry:Ban everyone that suggested a programming language
Motherfucker! German kicked my ass with 4. Ancient Greek made me cry with 5. But 15??[/QUOTE]if, however, you should come to Finland, then by all means, study Finnish ^_^ Just a cautionary advice, though: Finnish is often ranked among the most difficult languages to master, right after Mandarin Chinese. Fifteen different cases alone tend to scare people away.
OY! It is grammatical. But just like any human system, there's variations and exceptions. Just think about the pain us non-native English speakers have to go through, gettin' all your silly irregular verbs in orderThat's crazy. At least the Germans keep it mostly grammatical!
I can get what you mean about growing up with it, though. My heart breaks to children who learn creole or pidgin languages first. When it comes time to learn anything else, there's nowhere to go but up (in difficulty).
He already knows the most important one... 'MERICAN!Learn the most important ones... I´d say French, Spanish, or Mandarin.
What I meant was they use it pretty much expressly for ... I'm not sure what to call it. English uses word order to express Object, Subject, etc. German uses case. Apparently so does Finnish, but then you guys pile a whole bunch of other stuff on top as well!OY! It is grammatical. But just like any human system, there's variations and exceptions. Just think about the pain us non-native English speakers have to go through, gettin' all your silly irregular verbs in order
Good to know. All I'm sure of is that I spent 2 weeks in Haiti, and was able to communicate fairly effectively by day four. Haitian Creole was unbelievably simple.Also, creole languages tend to be quite settled. It's actually the way linguists make the distinction between a pidgin and a creole: a pidgin is a kind of a tool of necessity that one uses in a limited set of situations. BUT when a child grows up speaking a pidgin as their first language - being a native speaker of it, therefore - then it is called a creole. And when one uses a creole as one's first language in daily use, the field of linguistic expression grows and adapts, incorporating fields one could not discuss in the original pidgin. Tok Pisin (literally 'talk pidgin') is one such language. 1-2 million native speakers, and one of the three official languages of Papua New Guinea.
Linguistics 101, part of my basic studies
I don't know a lot of German, but I have a year and a half or university German in me, and I didn't find it impossible.I´m curious .. is german a difficult language to learn for a native english-speaker?
I have a sudden urge to write up a sitcom.It'll also make for really fun conversations: stoned mex, drunk spaniard & the newbie american.
Nope. It's actually, probably the easiest foreign language to learn for an native English speaker.I´m curious .. is german a difficult language to learn for a native english-speaker?
This is where we differ. I was proud of us.Two pages and not a single suggestion for Klingon?
For SHAME.
French? How is French relevant today? It's useful for seduction, but it's hardly useful for business, which is why he wants to learn a second language.[/QUOTE]Learn the most important ones... I´d say French, Spanish, or Mandarin.
I object to that list combining all of the Chinese Dialects, when they are all quite different. It is interesting that Hindi beats English as a native language though.I'm sorry Droll, but I think you have your figures wrong. French is NOWHERE near the most widely-spoken foreign language, not even after English.
http://www.nationsonline.org/oneworld/most_spoken_languages.htm
Well, of course when China and India both have 1 billion plus people, more people will speak those languages from those countries. When I said "widely," I meant in terms of this statistic:I'm sorry Droll, but I think you have your figures wrong. French is NOWHERE near the most widely-spoken foreign language, not even after English.
http://www.nationsonline.org/oneworld/most_spoken_languages.htm
The thing is, even that's not universal. Your American Sign Language is different from what they use in, say, the UK or France. Or Finland, for that matter.I say you learn Sign Language, but that's just me
Well, of course when China and India both have 1 billion plus people, more people will speak those languages from those countries. When I said "widely," I meant in terms of this statistic:I'm sorry Droll, but I think you have your figures wrong. French is NOWHERE near the most widely-spoken foreign language, not even after English.
http://www.nationsonline.org/oneworld/most_spoken_languages.htm
Well, of course when China and India both have 1 billion plus people, more people will speak those languages from those countries. When I said "widely," I meant in terms of this statistic:I'm sorry Droll, but I think you have your figures wrong. French is NOWHERE near the most widely-spoken foreign language, not even after English.
http://www.nationsonline.org/oneworld/most_spoken_languages.htm
The thing is, even that's not universal. Your American Sign Language is different from what they use in, say, the UK or France. Or Finland, for that matter.[/QUOTE]I say you learn Sign Language, but that's just me
Well, of course when China and India both have 1 billion plus people, more people will speak those languages from those countries. When I said "widely," I meant in terms of this statistic:I'm sorry Droll, but I think you have your figures wrong. French is NOWHERE near the most widely-spoken foreign language, not even after English.
http://www.nationsonline.org/oneworld/most_spoken_languages.htm
this, i look forwards to summer break but at the same time i dread it, because no matter how much i try to speak, write, or otherwise use japanese during the summer i always spend the last week before school trying to cram back in everything i've forgotten.I have tried to learn Japanese a couple times, took a class at a college and a little bit of rosetta stone, the problem I think I am encountering is immersion or day to day usage. And without perhaps consistent usage its hard to remeber it all. I dunno if there is a great way of getting around that, but ya.
Nah, if you are american (or look foreign, like I do) you dont even need portuguese, there are "Maria gringos" (think tourist groupies) at the airport and most popular beaches looking for unattached male tourists.Learn Portuguese. Trawl Rio for hawt chicks with JCM.
He already knows the most important one... 'MERICAN!Learn the most important ones... I´d say French, Spanish, or Mandarin.
in the constraints of the OP's question, it's really hard to to suggest that Chinese isn't very useful on the global business scale, especially given the country's purchasing parity. From that standpoint, it's a strange notion to ignore the third largest economy in the world. Yes, French is widely used, but a language sector behind a 4.4 trillion (USD) GDP (nominal) is not inconsequential.Because, honestly, outside of the Chinese in China and the Indians in India, and perhaps those who have emigrated and their children, you don't have a lot of people learning to speak those languages. It'll be useful to learn if you plan on doing business with these countries, but knowing Mandarin isn't very useful on a global scale when you aren't dealing with the Chinese. However, it's very easy to find people who aren't American who speak English and those who aren't French that speak French.
in the constraints of the OP's question, it's really hard to to suggest that Chinese isn't very useful on the global business scale, especially given the country's purchasing parity. From that standpoint, it's a strange notion to ignore the third largest economy in the world. Yes, French is widely used, but a language sector behind a 4.4 trillion (USD) GDP (nominal) is not inconsequential.[/QUOTE]Because, honestly, outside of the Chinese in China and the Indians in India, and perhaps those who have emigrated and their children, you don't have a lot of people learning to speak those languages. It'll be useful to learn if you plan on doing business with these countries, but knowing Mandarin isn't very useful on a global scale when you aren't dealing with the Chinese. However, it's very easy to find people who aren't American who speak English and those who aren't French that speak French.
in the constraints of the OP's question, it's really hard to to suggest that Chinese isn't very useful on the global business scale, especially given the country's purchasing parity. From that standpoint, it's a strange notion to ignore the third largest economy in the world. Yes, French is widely used, but a language sector behind a 4.4 trillion (USD) GDP (nominal) is not inconsequential.[/QUOTE]However his point still stands.Because, honestly, outside of the Chinese in China and the Indians in India, and perhaps those who have emigrated and their children, you don't have a lot of people learning to speak those languages. It'll be useful to learn if you plan on doing business with these countries, but knowing Mandarin isn't very useful on a global scale when you aren't dealing with the Chinese. However, it's very easy to find people who aren't American who speak English and those who aren't French that speak French.
in the constraints of the OP's question, it's really hard to to suggest that Chinese isn't very useful on the global business scale, especially given the country's purchasing parity. From that standpoint, it's a strange notion to ignore the third largest economy in the world. Yes, French is widely used, but a language sector behind a 4.4 trillion (USD) GDP (nominal) is not inconsequential.[/QUOTE]However his point still stands.Because, honestly, outside of the Chinese in China and the Indians in India, and perhaps those who have emigrated and their children, you don't have a lot of people learning to speak those languages. It'll be useful to learn if you plan on doing business with these countries, but knowing Mandarin isn't very useful on a global scale when you aren't dealing with the Chinese. However, it's very easy to find people who aren't American who speak English and those who aren't French that speak French.