French, German, Russian, Or Japanese?
I think that French or German for Biomedical, and maybe Russian for space exploration??
What do you think
2007-11-24
13:51:07
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10 answers
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asked by
Anonymous
in
Society & Culture
➔ Languages
Add your own of you feel like it>
2007-11-24
14:02:42 ·
update #1
Under means undergraduate
2007-11-24
14:03:08 ·
update #2
May I add the best option? Latin would definitely be the best option as most scientists speak Latin.
2007-11-24 13:54:18
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answer #1
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answered by Sam 3
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It really depends on where you would want to live and what specialization you want to have. Latin is a great language to learn for the purposes of etymology but it is not all that useful in your day-to-day life as an engineer. I'd say French is a safe bet since it is still commonly used in scientific circles, though English still is the predominant language.
2007-11-24 14:01:30
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answer #2
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answered by QuickQuestion 3
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There are many papers written in French, German
and Russian in most fields. In addition, Chinese
is becoming quite important in many areas.
Still, I would say a reading knowledge of
French and German is essential for
scientific work.
2007-11-24 15:23:15
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answer #3
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answered by steiner1745 7
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Latin would be great to learn root words, but It isn't essential. For example, chromosomes means "flourescent things," but that will not help you at all to know in a career. It would be best to learn German and French to be able to go through their Journals.
2007-11-24 14:18:54
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answer #4
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answered by Resonance Structure 5
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Any center japanese language. My son simply acquired approved to a language college, He will probably be learnign a center japanese language. His long term is ready. He can paintings for the DOD the CIA or simply trade - oil corporations, and so forth. well good fortune. Any language is high-quality to be trained
2016-09-05 13:27:07
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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Any language is great to learn. They are all useful in some place or another with someone who speaks said language. All languages are difficult to learn, and they all take a very long time to learn fluently. If your interested in learning a language, pick the one you have the MOST interest in learning... keep in mind, that learning a language is more than the syntax and vocab... it helps if your also interested in learning the culture and or history of that language and of the people who speak it.
2007-11-24 14:54:44
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answer #6
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answered by marylou 1
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With the standard of S.I. or known as Systems International this makes English as the shaker. Believe that or not especially when the title and name is derived form France.
2007-11-24 14:07:02
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answer #7
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answered by bearwabbitbearwabbit 3
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Latin, for sure. All of the scientific names are in Latin.
2007-11-24 13:59:01
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answer #8
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answered by Richard H 7
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Same.
2007-11-24 13:55:04
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answer #9
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answered by csaddler21 3
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Latin.
2007-11-24 13:54:26
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answer #10
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answered by Ben 7
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