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  1. #1
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    Default Easy Language To Learn

    So I work seasonal and am currently on my off season and have a break for a month now from uni so thought I might try teach myself a language (well not get fluent, just learn the basics and do it casually when I resume uni)!

    What languages do you think are easy/ I could get a good start on in 30 days?

    I was thinking French since I already know the basics of it or Norsk because I have family in Norway who don't know much English. I am learning towards Norwegian the only problem is if I do pursue it seriously I might be limited in who I can speak it with to practice down the road (my family over there are not into technology that much).

    Once I decide what I will attempt I will look for some online programs and videos and also go buy a few books/audio books

    Anyone have any recommendations for self-learning when it comes to languages?!

    moderator alert Thread moved by Nick (Forum Super Moderator): From 'Discuss Anything' as it is more suited here.
    Last edited by Nick; 28-01-2014 at 10:30 AM.

  2. #2
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    You can use language exchange websites like interpals to communicate with native speakers of the language and probably make some new foreign friends, there are also some skype group calls where they practice a certain language but thats pretty random

    or you can use Duolingo, it's pretty good for beginners

    I'd say Spanish is pretty easy as the pronunciation is pretty much based on the word

  3. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by Eric View Post
    You can use language exchange websites like interpals to communicate with native speakers of the language and probably make some new foreign friends, there are also some skype group calls where they practice a certain language but thats pretty random

    or you can use Duolingo, it's pretty good for beginners

    I'd say Spanish is pretty easy as the pronunciation is pretty much based on the word
    I'll give that Duolingo website a look at! I was thinking Spanish and I had a look into it but I don't think it interests me that much. I want to research and take an interest in the culture too if that makes sense.

  4. #4
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    Foreign Service Institute (FSI) compiled a list of what the estimated learning times (and thus difficulty) for several languages is. The 'easiest' they state would be these:

    Afrikaans
    Catalan
    Danish
    Dutch
    French
    Galician
    Italian
    Norwegian
    Portuguese
    Romanian
    Spanish
    Swedish
    --
    I used Duolingo for a while before and I would recommend it for starting off. When I started learning German though I just went to college library and grabbed a huge German grammar book and sifted through that instead (and German isn't that easy in regards to grammar, it's annoying, but the vocab is relatively simple). But yeah I always found just grabbing a book on the subject from a library to be much more appealing to me than any online source.
    /

  5. #5
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    French, Italian and Spanish are easy to learn? I'd love to try.

  6. #6
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    I've always thought English was the easiest language to learn.

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by Cassiieee View Post
    I've always thought English was the easiest language to learn.
    Infact English is apparently one of the hardest languages to learn. If you've learned a language you'd know that words are pronounced differently depending on:
    I
    You
    He
    She
    We
    You (Plural)
    They

    English is one of like three languages that is not like that it apparently that makes it confusing for different nationalities to learn English.

    I did German in school and personally I found it difficult but tbh I only started the class 5 months before my final tests (still got an OC2!). I'm going into a new course next year and you have to do either German, Spanish, French and Italian and I'm thinking Spanish because it's supposed to be one of the easiest I think it will be most beneficial. Italian would be an interesting language to learn? Lots of culture and stuff there too

  8. #8
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    Norwegian would actually be really interesting I think, they share a lot of word roots with us since a whole bunch of English comes from teutonic languages and of course for you it would serve an actual purpose since you have family in Norway - plus it'd be a fab reason to visit one of the most beautiful countries in the world if you could afford it

    If actually going there or speaking to your family in Norsk doesn't appeal to you then it's still a good one to learn because it sounds brutal and you could be in a death metal band
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  9. #9
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    I took French and German at school for a while and absolutely hated them both. Then I was offered the opportunity to take up Spanish in year 10 so I took it straight away.

    I had two years to learn it up to GCSE level and managed it no problem, getting A*s about 8 months in. I put it down to these CDs pretty much entirely. They don't help you with your writing much but I found Spanish writing was easy enough to just pick up as long as I knew how to say it out loud because all words follow certain "spelling rules".

    So yeah, I'd recommend Spanish but if you're not so keen I'd still definitely say using the Michel Thomas CDs are an absolute must- he does a load of other languages too (just google Michael Thomas (insertlanguage) Start).

  10. #10
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    You can't learn a language casually, you are either committed or you aren't. It takes a lot of time and effort to learn and retain even a basic vocabulary and simple grammatical structures.

    I think people underestimate how hard French actually is, it is certainly the hardest romance language (Spanish is without doubt the easiest). French has loads of free online learning resources but in my opinion, unless you're prepared to spend a minimum of two hours a day studying there's not much point.

    Norwegian is simpler in some ways (similar grammar and structure to English) but very complicated in other ways (there are hundreds and hundreds of accents in Norway and there are two official ways to spell every word). If you know Norwegian you can understand Swedish and Danish, which is an added bonus.

    Quote Originally Posted by iPhil View Post
    Infact English is apparently one of the hardest languages to learn. If you've learned a language you'd know that words are pronounced differently depending on:
    I
    You
    He
    She
    We
    You (Plural)
    They

    English is one of like three languages that is not like that it apparently that makes it confusing for different nationalities to learn English.
    Erm no this is totally wrong. English is actually one of the easiest languages to learn. It has a very simple grammar compared to most other languages (we don't assign genders to nouns, and very few verbs require conjugation). E.g. take the verb 'to buy', we only have to remember 'buy', 'buys' and 'bought' whereas in French they have to know achète, achètes, achetons, achetez, achètent, acheté, achetai, achetas, acheta, achetâmes, achetâtes, achetèrent, achetais, achetait, achetions, achetiez, achetaient, achèterai, achèteras, achètera, achèterons, achèterez, achèteront, achèterais, achèterait, achèterions, achèteriez, achèteraient, achetasse, achetasses, achetât, achetassions, achetassiez, achetassent... and more..........



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