Languages are being taught less and less now in education. Yet there are still many people who wish to learn a second language and it is often a sought after skill by large corporate companies. Rosetta stone offers interactive language lessons to download and would be a great choice to learn Russian as a second language as it is more interactive and helps you to relate to the words. You could also learn Russian in your community as many local schools offer the chance to learn languages as an evening class.
Any language you learn after your first (native) language is considered a second language. There is no specific one.
Hi. Moscow Russia doesn't have a second language - Russian is the only official one around.
A native language is a language that you learn after you born and second language can be described as a language that you learn after your learn your native language. It is also possible that you can be a bilingual speaker.
The UofW offers quite a few Slavic language courses, including Russian. learnandlistenusa.com has private tutors in your area so you can learn one on one if that suits your needs better.
infact English is the easiest one but if you are an English speaker i advise you to learn French or Spanish they are almost difficult but easier than the others such as Germanic and Russian
There is only one Russian language, but in Russia there are many nationalities (more than 100) and many languages.
Understanding how we most naturally learn language (how we learned our first language) helps understand the nature of language learning. The more you can mimic this process in teaching a second language, the better.It also helps the teacher understand ways learning a second language is unlike learning one's first.
German has the second largest number of first language speaking people in Europe.Coming after Russian but before French and English.It is also one of the world's major languages.Also it's very easy to learn and very fun to learn---------------------------------------------------It is easy to learn? And what about 'deutsche Sprache - schwere Sprache'? I think if the questioner never plans to leave America he'd better learn Spanish. Next option for me would be French. In lots of former colonies it is still an official language and therefore in many countries in Africa, some islands and don't forget Quebec. And then I would maybe think of German. I have nothing against my mother tongue but I am glad that I don't have to learn German as a second language.
China, being the most dynamic country in the world, has great potential to be explored, so I think you'd better learn Chinese. RUSSIAN. Russia's bigger then China and with the right leaders, can be powerful very much like the U.S. Russia has some of the best universities in the world. Plus, Russian's easier to learn than Chinese. So, learn Russian. Overall, I would imagine it would depend more upon where you live, travel, and do business then which country is bigger or more powerful. Neither one of them would do you any good if you were in Nicaragua looking for a bathroom, so to say. The best thing to do would be to check out your own area and see which one is used more. For instance, if you were an ambulance driver in Atlanta, Georgia, Chinese would be very valuable since there is a large Chinese community there. If you were doing the same thing in Alaska, Russian would probably do you more good.
To learn computer language you have to learn the machine specification. Every machine type has its own native language specification, so learning one computer's language won't help you learn the language of a different machine type, in the same way that learning French won't help you learn Mandarin or Russian. However, a high-level language makes use of high-level abstractions to provide a language that is common to all machine types; the language interpreter handles the low-level machine details so we can write our code in universal terms rather than in terms that only one specific machine type can actually understand.
You can't speak one language in another language, but you can translate from one language to another.
**** you no one knows