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A native language is the language that a person grows up speaking from birth, typically within their family or community. A second language is a language that is learned in addition to one's native language, often through formal education or immersion in a different linguistic environment.
yes, because there is a fairly larger amount of English speaking people than other languages. If you want to come to America, learn English. We should not have to learn your language because you decided to leave your native country.
no
About the same as you would learn any other language that is not your native language. It doesn't matter what religion you are.
You need to learn your native language in school education so that you can use it in the world.
Christian missionaries.
Any language you learn after your first (native) language is considered a second language. There is no specific one.
Arabic Is Definatly The Hardest Language To Learn And So Is Japanese,Correction:There's actually no such thing as a "hardest language to learn". It just depends on the person, their native language, and their motivations for learning.
Some can. Some only speak one language. Models from Europe, South America, and other countries where English typically isn't the first language generally have to learn English on top of their native language.
Bilingual education involves educating students in their native language and a second language. They learn academic skills in their native language and transfer them to a secondary language like English.
well you have to learn it in school because you have to learn how to spell it. that's why you learn it in school>
Your native language is the language you learned as a child. The Europeans have no native language. Instead, people in Europe have a number of native languages. Most people on this earth learn two or three languages. That way they can communicate with their closest neighbors. England used to have a great commercial empire. They spread their language far and wide. It became convenient for people to learn English to trade with the English. People who traded with the English and Americans could then use English to trade with each other. English became an important language for world business. Each country kept its native language. Each of the 28 nations of the European Common Market have all of its documents translated into its native language. That means there are 28 different translations done of every document. Most of the work of the Common Market is done in a language derived from English. It uses a simplified vocabulary and is developing its own idioms. Americans can easily understand it but have not been trained in using it. In America, the Indians spoke their native language. They now learn English. Many of them still speak their native language.