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Things such as Afrikaans and Esperanto

2006-10-21 00:02:22 · 9 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Languages

9 answers

Esperanto is easy an logical.

Maybe Lojban is more logical...
...and Toki Pona easier.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lojban
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toki_Pona

But Esperanto is more practical.

2006-10-23 08:56:05 · answer #1 · answered by Fajro 3 · 1 1

I could say that there is not going to be a lot change amongst languages within the stage of main issue for a baby finding out to talk - all languages have a tendency to expand ordinary facets that mirror the historical past and tradition of the audio system, however they are not able to be too ordinary due to the fact they could grow to be tricky to study, and humans then begin simplifying matters. On the opposite hand, a few writing strategies are without doubt less difficult than others, even for local audio system. Spanish, Italian, Turkish, German, amongst others, have written types that experience a really simple dating to speech. French is extra tricky, as you are not able to continually are expecting the spelling from the sound, eg haut, au, aux, eau, eaux all sound the equal. But a minimum of you'll be able to are expecting the pronunciation from the spelling, which is not continually the case in English. Still English is handy when compared with Chinese, and particularly handy when compared with Japanese. For English audio system, European languages are less difficult to study, notably within the prior phases, as they have got extra phrases in usual, and extra equivalent grammatical buildings, than say Arabic or Chinese.

2016-09-01 00:22:56 · answer #2 · answered by pointdexter 4 · 0 0

Tamil. The way the words are pronounced do not vary, unlike English.

2006-10-21 00:11:25 · answer #3 · answered by Hardrock 6 · 0 1

I don't think it is the easiest, but German is definitely the most logical of all the languages I know.

2006-10-21 00:11:37 · answer #4 · answered by OxfordUK 2 · 2 2

Indonesian. It has no tenses, no verb "to be," and it is agglutinative, so if you know the dozen or so perfectly regular prefixes and suffixes, you can make and understand hundreds of words.

2006-10-21 02:36:32 · answer #5 · answered by dognhorsemom 7 · 0 2

English, and Cantonese.

2006-10-21 00:03:41 · answer #6 · answered by changmw 6 · 1 2

"Drunk" Fluency in drunk is international. No matter where you come from, everyone who is drunk understands each other!

2006-10-21 00:11:44 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 2 2

Chinese

2006-10-21 02:24:56 · answer #8 · answered by hbo1230 2 · 0 1

jive.

2006-10-21 00:03:52 · answer #9 · answered by morningstar 3 · 0 3

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