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which is the world's most difficult language?
Is it Icelandic??
also please tell what exactly do they mean by Indo-Aryan Languages? and how did these languages come into being. |
Re: which is the world's most difficult language?
It's pretty hard to say what the world's most difficult language is. For an English speaker, it wouldn't be Icelandic -- that's a Germanic language (as is English), and while it is apparently quite hard to learn, the basic grammar is likely somewhat similar. For an English speaker, the most difficult languages to learn would be ones that aren't Indo-European languages; Mandarin or Japanese or some other east Asian language would probably be the most confusing for an English speaker.
Indo-Aryan is a language sub-family that's present in the Indian subcontinent. Indo-Aryan is part of a much larger group of languages called Indo-European. That family includes Hindi, Farsi, Greek, English, Russian, Spanish, Icelandic and many other languages. Indo-European has many sub-families, like the Germanic branch, the Slavic branch, and the Romance branch (these groups compose the majority of languages spoken in Europe). Really, just check out the wikipedia page for a basic understanding. How did they come into being? Uh, I'll leave that one for someone else... Why the rolling eyes? |
Re: which is the world's most difficult language?
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Re: which is the world's most difficult language?
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Re: which is the world's most difficult language?
some experts point out that Sanskrit is the mother of all languages that are Indo-European. is it true?
plus , are these languages older than the Egyptian Languages during the times of Pyramids? |
Re: which is the world's most difficult language?
For an english speaker? I'd say that one of the Northeast Caucasian languages would be the most difficult.
They have up to 60 consonant sounds, up to 30 vowels, etc. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northea...sian_languages There is also Finnish and hungarian, which sound nothing like indo-european languages, and finnish has 16 noun cases if I remember correctly. |
Re: which is the world's most difficult language?
Actually, Zay, I'd say the hardest language to learn for any person on Earth would be Basque. After countless decades of linguistic investigation, analyzing everything from the Vedas to Sumerian to Japanese, it has been determined that there are absolutely no languages on the face of the earth related to Basque.
It's actually believed Basque is the last remaining language of pre Indo-European origin in Europe. |
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Still, are we completely throwing away the idea of Mandarin? I've not even tried to delve into it, but I know people who do speak it, and they say it is next to fucking impossible to comprehend until you've studied it consistently for 2 years. I suppose these Caucasian languages may be very hard for a native Anglophone, but from what I know, they at least use a phonetic alphabet... |
Re: which is the world's most difficult language?
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I looked it up, and it seems that other pre Indo-European languages in Europe, like Iberian, were completely unrelated to Basque, yet neither were Indo-European. Odd... Anyways, I was talking to a friend about Chinese (Mandarin to be precise), and it seems that after you get over their script, it's a relatively easy language to learn. The grammar is incredibly simple: There are no tenses, no genders, nor a system for differentiating amounts (singular, plural). But, on the other hand, they have a set of grammatical rules different from our own. |
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