english, the only one i know lol
english, the only one i know lol
english, the only one i know lol
@Kumaran_Sadurangam said in #4:
Hindi
I don’t think so?
@FQT said in #52:
I don’t think so?
It is because hindi is not my mother tongue
@Kumaran_Sadurangam said in #53:
It is because hindi is not my mother tongue
Not mine too, but I can both understand and speak, but I can't write. Maybe because I am a listener.
@FQT said in #54:
Not mine too, but I can both understand and speak, but I can't write. Maybe because I am a listener.
Ok
i've known five lingos since a long time, and recently i have been trying to expand into some non-native languages, say russian..
and i don't think anything is hard if you really try and push through :PPP
@omid712 said in #48:
As far as I know the 3 hardest languages in the world are in the following order:
- Mandarin Chinese
- Arabic
- Russian hell me
I know arabic and currently know 4 languages (or 5 if you count French which i half-know)
Arabic has many unusual laws and many dialects which are very or little hard to understand depending on where you are from in the Arab-Speaking world. For example, it would extremely hard for a Lebanese to understand the Morrocan dialect of arabic, due to the geographic location of Lebanon being very far from Morroco. Besides that, Lebanese Dialect of arabic borrows many foreign words from languages you wouldnt even believe like English and French.
Arabic was standardized into MSA (Modern Standard Arabic) between the late 19th to early 20th centuries by language proffesionals.Arabic also has a harder writing system and alphabet than most languages.
Arabic has 28 alphabet and does not have sounds like “G” and “P” and has letters that are very hard to pronounce for an average person without LOTS of practice, such as "ض"، "ق"، "غ"، "ع"، "خ"، "ح"،"ذ"،"ط" and "ظ" . Which are all absent in English. The Arabic writng system is different than english. In English , all letters are in one form no matter there position in a word. However, in Arabic, each letter has a different form depending on where it is in a word.
For example: “ل" (like all letters) has 4 forms: Beginning of word, middle (between 2 letters) and ending.
Also, it is written from right to left in a sticked form and some letters contradict the 4 form rule.
Like "د" and "ذ" do not have a middle form.most Arabic words come from a 3 (rarely, 4) letter word root:
For example "ع-ل-م", related to science, knowledge, etc., is the root for the following words:
عَلِمَ، يَعلَمُ، اِعلَم، علَّمَ، يُعلِّمُ، علِّم، عُلِمَ، عُلِّمَ، اِستعلمَ، عالِم، عِلمٌ، مَعلومٌ، مُعلِّمٌ، استعلام، تعليمٌ، مُتعلِّم، اِعلام، مستعلمArabic has many more difficult laws that I want to cover but im too lazy so Ill just stop.
(No, I didnt use Chatgpt)
in my opinion its hindi
Yapanese... I'm not fluent in it
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