Rank the languages of europe from best to learn to worst

Rank the languages of europe from best to learn to worst

1. English
2. Spanish
3. Russian
4. French
5. German
6. Italian
7. Portuguese
8. Greek
9. Turkish
10. Slavic languages
11. Scandinavian languages
12. Dutch

Other urls found in this thread:

pagef30.com/2008/08/why-norwegian-is-easiest-language-for.html
twitter.com/SFWRedditVideos

>Russian
>Slavic languages

referring to the non--russian slavic languages, obviously

you're so fucking fat and lazy

>implying you can tell difference

how does it feel to be a slav? is that why you're so mad

also how similar is the russian language to other other slavic languages?

how does it feel to live in such irrelevant slavic shitholes that most people still think your country never broke up?

>how does it feel to be a slav? is that why you're so mad
>how does it feel to live in such irrelevant slavic shitholes that most people still think your country never broke up?
Is oke. We are so irrelevant that I dont think much about our countries.
>also how similar is the russian language to other other slavic languages?
Its not. Go to /slav/ and take a look.

>spanish second
CHI

>portuguese
>worst to learn

How does it feel to suck nigger's dicks on daily basis?

Feels pretty good t b h

How do you know? Did you try?

>from best to learn to worst
You mean my personal opinion on how this languages sound or objective thinking on benefits you will get from learning some new languages?

>implying it broke up

it did

If we're talking career success:

English
German
French
Maybe Spanish

All the others (with whom you might do business) either speak English, or aren't worth learning.

>All the others (with whom you might do business) either speak English
Frenchies and Germans don't speak English, really?

fucking slavs ruin everything

i just wanted to have a fun language thread

You still have it. Your definition of "fun" is weird.

If you want to go the lazy route, yeah, don't bother with French/German.

But if you want to do srs business, it's best to communicate in their native language.

Especially with the French. With German, most will speak English with varying fluency, and young professionals are almost always near-fluent in English.

But with French, it's another story. They tend to resist English education, and even their younger generation either barely know the language, or speak it with a godawful accent -- unless they've studied abroad or received excellent education.

this

Whats the language on the border of Belarus & Lithuania?

Thanks for info, I didn't know that resisting education in foreign language can affect someone's ability to speak foreign language so badly.

Must be Polish. This map isn't entirely correct though, don't take it seriously.

1. English
2. French (French is spoken more IN EUROPE than Spanish)
3. Spanish
4. German
5. Russian
6. Italian
7. Portuguese
8. Serbo-Croatian
9. Dutch
10. Greek
11. Turkish
12. Bulgarian (Including the Macedonian Dialect)
13. Romanian
14. Every other Slavic language
15. Every other Germanic language
16. Every other Celtic language
17. Albanian
18. Other languages that I didn't mention which are irrelevant

well i was including the usefulness outside of europe as well

if we're going to only include IN europe then why would you put spanish over german? is it just because germans generally speak decent english?

1. Hungarian , Finnish , Estonian
2. Norwegian , Swedish , Danish , Icelandic
3. Other non relevant languages

1. Basque
2. Albanian
3. Latin
4. Vulgate Latin
5. Gothic
5. Some weird Suomi dialect.
6. Koine Greek
7. Tocharian
8. Esperanto
9. Na'vi
10. Klingon
12. Brony-speak
13. Broken Weaboo

Oh yeh.

14. Hittite
15. Gypsy moon speak

To be fair, it's way too much effort compared to the reward.

We all speak fairly good English here.

And people are scared of Brazil nowadays, for some reason.

I would really like to study a Scandinavian language and they're said to be really easy for English speakers, but I have a hard time deciding on which one, plus everyone in all of those countries speaks English anyway.

Swedish is said to have the highest number of native speakers, and is also used in Finland so that's 2 countries; Danish is also in Greenland and I've read they teach it in Icelandic and Faroaese schools so that's a lot of different places but they're all very lowly populated. Norwegian well there's all the heavy metal I could finally understand.

Really depends highly on what your native language is. So starting from German, it goes

>just a different dialect tier
Dutch

>distant cousin tier
English

>Are we even related? tier
Swedish, Danish, Norwegian

>Painfully difficult grammar, but still doable tier
French, Spanish, Italian

>Even more painful grammar and impossible phonology tier
Slavic languages

>Ayy lmao tier
Hungarian, Finnish, Sami, Basque

pagef30.com/2008/08/why-norwegian-is-easiest-language-for.html

If you just want to learn Scandi language for the sake of it Norwegian is only correct answer

>guerre
>from Frankish

k

>German
>Easier to learn than dutch
Enlighten me OP