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60 answers

Try Esperanto!

2006-07-13 22:57:43 · answer #1 · answered by Fajro 3 · 1 2

As French, English and Spanish all have a latin base in most of their grammar, Italian or Portuguese would be a breeze to learn, although the similarities between Spanish and them might cause a little confusion. If that's the case, you could try learning a whole new language and alphabet, like Mandarin, Japanese, Hebrew, Aranian or Russian. If you're only learning as a hobby, not for work opportunities, why don't you try learning Latin or Gaelic before they become extinct? Greek would also be an interesting language to master, just so you could read their classical literature in tact. The language you choose will depend on why you want to learn it, what is your goal?

2006-07-09 19:53:08 · answer #2 · answered by canguroargentino 4 · 0 0

I would suggest Latin--something I've longed to learn, although finding classes for Latin has proven difficult. The three languages that you mention (French, English, and Spanish) have, as their base, Latin; hence, the commonalities of their roots would become clear as you progressed. Once Latin is mastered, I would suggest Greek. I was teaching myself Greek and fell in love with the precision and musical intonations inherent to the sounds of their words. It was also fun to learn the alphabet, which visiting Greek sailors taught my husband and I (correct pronounciations were learned, since they were actually Greek). I'd be interested in knowing more about your interest in and proficiency with languages.

2006-07-18 04:12:14 · answer #3 · answered by Armchair Goddess 2 · 0 0

You can easily learn italian. German is an interesting language too. Also Greek is a beautiful language that will help you understand much more of the languages you already speak (roots of words, etc).

2006-07-10 00:00:59 · answer #4 · answered by cpinatsi 7 · 0 0

those who had instructions in a unmarried overseas language previous to a unique many times discover the first overseas language less difficult, yet that is many times not an purpose actuality as that they had extra instructions already. (e.g. the British studying French in school and attempt to address German later...) it style of feels to me that the most important element in studying a language has not been stated yet. the mum tongue we've all realized. an section speaker of one language team can (given ideal academic and chance to practice) extra certainly study the different languages in that team as they have similarities in pronunciation, grammar... the first overseas language could have an same outcome on extra study. English, Dutch, German, Danish and Swedish are Germanic languages. Spanish, French, Italian and Latin are Romance languages. The Asian languages have their own communities with chinese language and eastern interior of an same one. some community English audio equipment residing interior the united states of a have possibilities to practice Spanish even as people in aspects of Canada use French. English (straight forward) Spanish (medium) French (medium) / German (medium) eastern (problematic) chinese language (problematic) Btw. having 2 or 3 genders doesn't make an excellent distinction as both require you to study a noun with its article. that is the German flexibility in structuring a sentence (interior of rules) that would take a even as to get used to. The linguist stated that German makes use of "SOV note order". -> incorrect, study extra that is fullyyt authentic each and every so often - subsequently above stated flexibility. subject verb merchandise i like you. Ich liebe dich. (acceptable German)

2016-10-14 07:24:11 · answer #5 · answered by cottrell 4 · 0 0

Your best bet for future purposes is to either learn Farsi or Spanish.

Farsi is what used to be known as Persian which is widely spoken in Iran. Trust me when I tell you this could be the biggest ticket to good $$$. Ever seen what a translator gets paid?

...sorry, missed that u ALREADY speak spanish!

2006-07-09 19:47:16 · answer #6 · answered by wizardslizards 4 · 0 0

You may know how to SPEAK 3 languages, but you learn to spell in English before tackling another language. Good luck.

2006-07-09 19:46:24 · answer #7 · answered by monkersmom 3 · 0 0

Mandarin Chinese. With English and spanish already under your belt, adding Mandarin will allow you to communicate with the vast majority of the world - using one of those three languages.

2006-07-10 02:22:44 · answer #8 · answered by mike i 4 · 0 0

I would suggest German or perhaps one of the "dead" languages such as old English. Just try to balance the romantic languages in your repertoire with some more Germanic languages. Or why not Esperanto.

2006-07-09 19:47:46 · answer #9 · answered by Lucifer 4 · 1 0

Italian because grammatically it's similar French, and it's vocabulary is akin to Spanish. It is also a very rich and expressive language.

2006-07-09 21:21:24 · answer #10 · answered by zameaze 2 · 0 0

Russian

2006-07-09 19:44:55 · answer #11 · answered by just_beju 2 · 0 0

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