So, what are the most difficult Indo-Europeans languages to learn? In my opinion they're Japanese and Greek

So, what are the most difficult Indo-Europeans languages to learn? In my opinion they're Japanese and Greek.

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we are actually honorary aryan but our lang is UMA m8

Japanese isn't Indo-European

I wish Japanese were Indo-Europian with Kanji.

Japanese isn't Sinic language like Chinese?

No.

Finnish

No, it's Japonic, together with Ryukyuan languages.

The question is moot if you don't consider the learner's language[s].

Outside Ryukyuan and some defunct language of the southern tip of Korea, Japanese is an isolated language.

i'd say arabic is pretty tough desu

>Indo-european
Hm... Tagalog, certainly

Greenlandic probably

My guess, considering a Romance speaker: Hindi/Urdu.
>complex vowel system
>five sets of consonants - most IE languages have three
>millennia of semantic drift and borrowings made the vocabulary alien to each other
>declensions - nowhere as complex as Slavs/Greek/German, but still

He said Indo-European, not Afro-Asiatic.

>He said Indo-European
thats_the_joke.pdf

Sorry. My assburgery is showing.

I've heard Finnish is quite hard to finish.

u guise know nuffin

WE WUZ OTTOMAN SAMURAIS N SHIEEET

Ayy rmao. Japanese grammar is pretty clear for me.

Ataw septik (nom.) kim? (who?), ne? (what?)
Ilik septik (gen.) kimniñ?, neniñ? -nıñ, -niñ, -dıñ, -diñ, -tıñ, -tiñ
Barıs septik (dat.) kimge?, nege?, qayda? -ğa, -ge; -qa, -ke; -na, -ne; -a, -e
Tabıs septik (acc.) kimdi?, neni? -nı, -ni; -dı, -di; -tı, -ti; -n
Jatıs septik (loc.) kimde?, nede?, qayda? -da, -de; -ta, -te; -nda, -nde
Şığıs septik (abl.) kimnen?, neden?, qaydan?, qaşannan? -dan, -den; -tan, -ten; -nan, -nen
Kömektes septik (com.) kimmen?, nemen? -men/-menen, -ben/-benen, -pen/-penen

I'd say Baltic languages. They have really conservative and archaic grammar, with all these clasterfucks with cases and shiet (even in worse degree than Slavic and Romance languages), and they still don't have adequate guides or textbooks.

>These examples come from Starostin's database, which contains a comprehensive list of comparisons and hypothetical Altaic etymologies. While Starostin was a first-class scholar, there are weakness with Altaic, not the least of which is the poor quality of the vowel correspondences. Another one is the relative paucity of reconstructions for basic vocabulary terms. Furthermore, Starostin made numerous mistakes with the Japanese data, such as misidentifying Japanese words, reconstructing secondary phenomena in dialects back to the proto-language, overlooking accentual distinctions in Japanese, and ignoring the historical formation (i.e., morphological structure) of certain words. Moreover, he made mistakes with data in other Altaic languages as well. Whatever connection Japanese may have to Altaic languages cannot be demonstrated by the current state of Altaic reconstruction.

Kazakh, declension of "qorap"(box)

Nom. qorap(the box)
Gen. qoraptin(of the box)
Dat. qorapqa(to the box)
Acc. qorapti(the box)
Loc. qorapta(on/in/at the box)
Abl. qoraptan(from the box)
Com. qorappen(with the box)

WE WUZ KHANS OTTOMANS SAMURAIS SUMERIANS N SHIEET
youtube.com/watch?v=eyRV4LmjaQc

Nom. düken(the shop)
Gen. dükenniñ(of the shop)/ jp. mise no
Dat. dükenge(to the shop)/ jp. mise e/ni
Acc. dükendi(the shop)/ jp. mise wo
Loc. dükende(in/at the shop)/ jp. mise de/ni
Abl. dükennen(from the shop)/ jp. mise kara
Com. dükenmen(with the shop) jp. mise to/de

AND ALSO WE ARE AMERICAN INDIANS.
top kek

dükende ne bar? - what is at the shop?
dükenniñ işinde ne bar? - what is inside the shop?

Aren't actual Turkics (not you, but actual Central Asian chinks) related to Native Americans?

El PeruANO looks like southern Kazakh in fact

we are %15 turkic.And probably I'm %30 cuz my mom is turkmen tribe.And also First turks weren't asian.
WatchTurks become asian after gokturks.Read---->en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ergenekon

Yes, native americans are originally from siberia and whatnot

üşin - for

sen üşin - for you
men üşin - for me
baru üşin - to go(not infinitive)
kelu üşin - to come(not infinitive)
dükenge kelu üşin - to come to the shop
kerek - necessary
aqşa - money
dükenge kelu üşin, aqşa kerek I/we/you... need money to go to the shop