PS: Immerse yourself in these free English lessons: Free learning: Prepositions — More on Omission — Sentense Structure — Alone, lonely, lonesome and lone
- vincentApril 2019
GIVE ANSWERS
kevlevroneApril 2019 It is 100% true that you need to talk to someone. It is hard to learn a language just memorized some words and rules. You have to speak at least so you can use everything you have learned before. |
kevlevroneApril 2019 Hi there. I am new here. I think it is true that there is no easiest language. It is only up to you. For someone one language can be easier but for another one it is not. |
reyhanehr88April 2019 u know there is no easy or very hard language learning for the students or anyone . it only depends on the person . how they fight with the problems in the way to learn it . if u try a lot and more important than anything is : loving the work u are doing , enjoying and having fun . just love the work that u are doing bro !!
nmesomtoChukwuApril 2019 Hi. In my opinion, most people consider their native languages easiest to learn and languages that differ a lot from their native languages hardest. For example, those whose native languages employ Latin or Roman script (like English) consider languages that use Hankil (Korean) or Kanji characters (Chinese) difficult. Enormous differences in literary syntax or sentence structure also qualifies languages to be considered harder than others. Therefore, lots of people consider languages that are very similar to their native languages easiest to learn. |
alecoibaApril 2019 My personal opinion is that, there is no easiest or hardest language. I believe it has to do with whether you like it or not. If you like it it will come easy to you, if you don´t like it, it will be hard to learn for you because you are thinking you don´t like it. It´s the same as a job. The jobs we enjoy doing seem to be easier. |
anton_maximovApril 2019 There are no easy languages to learn, buddy. It all depends on how deep you want to dive in, what your native language is, how much the logics of your native language differs from your learning language and your possibility of practice. |