An easy way to start with the basics in the comfort of your home is start with Interactive on-line courses (websites such as 'Busuu') or searching for DVD courses via Amazon. However no experience will be as valuable as learning from a native speaker in person, who can take the time to answer your questions about the inner workings of the language. If you live in a large town or city I would recommend contacting local colleges to see if they offer evening courses (in some cities you will possibly find small language schools specifically for the purpose at hand).
Learn to speak...
To learn to speak it, German is harder, yes.
to speak German and Hindi.
Only if they learn it as a foreign language.
Try Byki.com, ive found it really useful it can be a little repetetive but it stays in my head and you learn how to write in German too.
Ich möchte Deutsch (sprechen) lernen.
as of 2012, approximately 80 million non-Germans speak German as a second language.
For the majority of German-Americans the answer is no. Some German families expect their children to speak German at home, even when in the United States but there are many American children with German parents who don't speak the language.
It is difficult to get an accurate number. There is a German minority of approximately 15,000 people who live in Denmark. German along with English are the two main foreign languages that students learn in school.
Queen Victoria's first language was German. She did not learn to speak English until she was three.
Yes. Their first language is Pennsylvania Dutch- (a dialect of German). They speak only this language until they get to be around six at the time they start school. Then they begin to learn English.
My experience of meeting Romanians is that if their first language is Romanian they learn French as a second language but if their first language is Hungarian they learn German.