Hardest european language to learn?

Hardest european language to learn?
Dutch

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learnpolishfeelgood.com/polish-verb-tenses.html
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polish_grammar#Verbs
twitter.com/SFWRedditGifs

not even close

hungarian is the worse

I'd say Polish.

Slavic pronouciation + declensions + unlike Russian, they have a fuckton of tenses and moods

Or Hungarian, maybe.

"no"

It's probably Archi.

>It is unusual for its many phonemes and for its contrast between several voiceless velar lateral fricatives and voiceless and ejective velar lateral affricates and a voiced velar lateral fricative. It is an ergative–absolutive language with four noun classes and has a remarkable morphological system with huge paradigms and irregularities on all levels.

>Mathematically, there are 1,502,839 possible forms that can be derived from a single verb root.

Finnish.

I guess Icelandic or polish is the hardest for at least japanese people.

Probably finno-ugric languages such as finnish/estonian/hungarian

What tenses does polish have?

Finnish/Hungarian

>Not basque

>Not portuglandese
You fags couldnt if your life depended on it

What is basque

learnpolishfeelgood.com/polish-verb-tenses.html

So Past, Present, Future, Conditional + Perfective/Imperfective, + Gerundif etc

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polish_grammar#Verbs

I'm learning Russian and at least you guys only have 2-3 tenses

Portuguese sounds like a weird Slavic language. I bet it's easy to learn.

at least we have nasal vowels

>tfw only two nations able to pronounce hon hon hon are Frenchmen are Poles

You lost a bet then, trust me m8 you cant

what's this map about

top kék

Anything Finno-Ugric

muslim majority areas

Nigger try Estonian

i don't think so, amsterdam's coloured green

>Niet basque

Neger wat?

yes vs no on the ukraine referendum

Finnish/Estonian/Hungarian твн.

>basque

what was that one language in eastern europe that requires pronunciation coach for children to accurately say certain sounds? i believe it was either czech or slovenian. that sounds pretty impossible to master as a foreigner

All these categories exist in Russian as well. The only difference is that Polish uses agglutination more often:
[ja] poszł-a-by-m = ja by poshl-a
but at the same time:
ona się uczy = ona uchit-sia

Urk dark red
Kek

The only pronunciation coaches for children I've heard of are those who correct speech impediments. Still, Slovene is pretty hard for foreigners because of how different the standard/literary language is from dialects.

Are we going for Indo-European or European by geography?

If geography, probably Hungarian.
If Indo-European, probably Polish.

>Dutch
>hard
Neger, alsjeblieft.

Basque seeing as it's a spooky language isolate

It looks like an alien language doesn't it?

Even fucking German is harder than Dutch.

Dutch is just meme English + German

>ik ben
>neger wat

Just because Moroccans can't learn de and het doesn't mean Dutch is a hard language.

Portuguese does have nasal sounds too tbf, the reason they wouldn't be able to pronounce hon hon hon is the lack of a h

I don't get why people have so much difficulty learning it, it's literally just getting used to it. I'm saying that as a Southern European living in the French speaking part; people here don't even try to learn the different articles.

not the same person btw, I'm Spanish.

Oh but we can, portuguese is the most articulate language of all, which makes it easy to learn any other language, we dont have a problem saying a single letter differently

There are too many of us desu

I don't know m8, my parents really struggle with pronouncing correctly many French words. Don't even let me get started with the different nasal sounds, r and h

Portuguese is literally just slighly more difficult than spanish.

Anyways, my vote goes for czech

>7 cases
>that r with a mark sound
>consonant clusters
>there are no hard rules for gender, declension and conjugation.

I'll be trying to learn it after german, but I'm already suffering.

>-käyttöisyys
>Untranslatable
Usability

Monikättöiysyys
Multi-usability

Basque?

this

Eh, Dutch is easier than German.

Think about Brazilian Portuguese then. That's easier and has a bigger community.

>mfw I'm Portuguese

Our verb system is pretty convoluted, but we lost most of the cases, so I guess it's a fair trade.

So I'd say the hardest would be some meme language like Finnish.

probably finno-ugric, since we are like the only european countries that speak non-european language and that makes our language so much more different from other european nations

>Not realising Diets existed before German

Kek

German is the meme language here.