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2007-08-16 17:47:03 · 2 answers · asked by Srbo Sutaric 5 in Society & Culture Languages

2 answers

vrach (врач) is the most commonly used term. If you say doctor (доктор) you will still be understood, but there might be some confusion because usually it's only used when talking about a college degree.

2007-08-16 20:20:38 · answer #1 · answered by Misanthropist 6 · 2 0

1

2016-05-28 04:50:18 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Spanish and Russian are my top two, for me personally I would go for Spanish because I plan to live in North America (but anything can happen), and I already know Russian lol. Since you don't want to do Spanish, I recommend Russian: Spanish is good, especially if you live (or plan to live) in North America (500 million speakers world wide). Russian is also very useful, no its not similar to Korean lol, but if you learn how to speak, very easy (relatively) to learn to read and write because you spell the world exactly how you hear it, so if you know all the letters you can literally sound out all the words and 99% of the time be correct. (300 million speakers world wide), yes less common than Spanish, but it does cover a larger sphere of influence in the world, also Russia has many business opportunities right now, especially good for English speaking businessman, so i will expect it to be a very useful language. (+ similar to Polish, Ukrainian, Belorussian, Serbian, etc., meaning once you know Russian you can learn those also) Japanese is my third choice, (don't worry about the earthquake at all), (130 million speakers worldwide) however its only really popular in Japan, and a small minority in countries with Japanese immigrants. Also both Russian and Spanish spill over into other countries, Spanish is spoken in a lot of Central and South American countries, while Russian is spoken everywhere in the former Soviet Union, including Israel. However I'm not sure how similar Japanese is to Korean, so this many be a plus for you. Lastly, I would not recommend you to take Turkish. Spanish, Russian, and Japanese are all much more useful. (only 90 million speakers worldwide) and limited sphere of influence. Can't confirm how hard it is to learn though. My other two choices would be Arabic and Chinese (340 and 1300 million speaker respectively), firstly because both these regions are developing rapidly, so expect to see a lot of business there, plus Arab and Chinese people are immigrating everywhere, and there are a lot of them, so it can really give you an advantage. Hope this helps (go for Russian) ;)

2016-03-18 05:29:18 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

For the best answers, search on this site https://shorturl.im/avgDv

Japanese and Korean have a lot of similarities! It would be easier for you to learn Japanese. I've never heard that Russian and Korean are similar... but I wouldn't really know since I don't speak Korean (I'm familiar with what it sounds like, though). I'm in the process of learning Japanese and Russian. Both are beautiful languages! In my Japanese class, there are a lot of Koreans and they point out many similarities between Korean and Japanese. If it's possible, you should learn at least two of those languages. As for usefulness in the medical field, it depends on where you will be working. Spanish would be the best if you plan on working in any of the Americas, because there are a lot of people who speak Spanish. In Korea or Japan, Japanese would be best. If working in Turkey or Russia, Turkish or Russian would be best, respectively. I believe Japan will recover by the time you become a doctor. :)

2016-04-06 23:55:12 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

vrach
врач

2007-08-16 17:53:26 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 3 0

vrach

2007-08-16 19:32:22 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

медицинский доктор

2007-08-16 17:58:03 · answer #7 · answered by Belle3681 3 · 0 4

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