The answer is not a definitive. It is probably dependent upon whether the guy is from one of the former British possessions, born descended from England populace, or of Middle Eastern or Hindhuland descent. I'd guess that for common spolen languages that any of the Viet Nam language and those surrounding country's dialects is the least easily translated from any of the above of British "designation." Thus, the answer is whatever languages are original small territory of Indo-China with whatever original France from France's language invented by the guy that owned the country, before the gypsies cut out the guys connection with the Moors and Persia.
2007-03-30 08:18:59
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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It's interesting that you phrased it as "British citizen," since British citizens can be of any nationality. Now, since I think we can infer that you meant a person of Anglo-Saxon stock (of which I also am, being a white American and a linguist as well) the languages usually considered hardest for "us" are Chinese (any dialect), Japanese and Arabic. I speak Chinese and Japanese, and they are most assuredly difficult. The "click" languages of the Southern Bantu family in Africa are also undoubtedly difficult.
2007-03-30 15:59:30
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answer #2
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answered by Adam T 2
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i heard Icelandic is 1 of the difficults languages in the world 2 learn. mandarin or Japanese arent easy aswell.
2007-03-30 15:18:45
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answer #3
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answered by mysterio 2
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My guess is English. Not one of them spells "color" correctly, and they all refer to Soccer as Football.
2007-03-30 16:11:39
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answer #4
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answered by open4one 7
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