'Learning difficulty' depends on the languages that you already know. It is not absolute. For example, if you have a good knowledge of Russian or any other Slavic language, you should find Ukrainian and Polish easy to learn. If you speak a Germanic language other than English (Danish, Dutch, etc.), German is definitely the easiest. If you speak a Romance language (Spanish, French, etc.), Romanian is easier. If you speak English, Romanian would also probably be easier, though German would be a close second.
Other Slavic languages; Byelorussian to the greater degree than other languages.
Most languages not in Europe. Finnish, Estonian and Hungarian and other Uralic languages are not indo European languages in origin. Persian, and languages developed from Sanskrit (ie Hindi, Urdu, Bengali, punjabi etc.) ARE indo-European. Maltese is not. Telugu, Kannada, and Tamil are Indian languages that are Dravidian, not related to Sanskrit. You weren't very specific so this is the best I can do, sorry.
The closest language to Russian is probably either Ukranian, Belarus, Bulgarian, or Serbian. Ukrainian, Belarussian, and Rusyn (arguably a dialect) are the closest languages, linguistically speaking, to Russian. They are East Slavic languages. Other Slavic languages are Polish, Czech, Slovak, Slovenian, Serbian, Croatian, Bulgarian, Macedonian, and Bosnian.
The language that is not an Indo-European language is Japanese.
Most of the languages of the world are not Indo-European, such as:HebrewArabicAll Chinese languagesJapaneseSwahiliZuluCherokeeNavajoQuechuaGuaraniMāoriFilipino
Many, the two most important languages are Ukrainian and Russian, but according to a recently changed law, Hungarian, Romanian and Crimean Tatar are official regional languages too.
The following 19 native languages are spoken in Canada:AbernaquieAlgonquinBeaverBella CoolaBlackfootBloodCreeGros VenturHaidiInuvikKootenayMicMacMohawkNootkaOjibwayPigeneseSalishSarcreeTlinkin
Official Languages: The primary official language of Austria-Hungary was High German. In some aspects of the government, due to the dual monarchy, the second official language was Hungarian.Spoken Languages: While these languages did not have official status as national languages, there were a number of additional languages including: Czech, Italian, Moravian, Polish, Romani/Gypsy Romanian, Ruthenian Serbo-Croatian, Slovak, Slovene Ukrainian, and Yiddish. There were also foreigners living in the Austro-Hungarian Empire from other origins who spoke their particular languages.
Finnish and Hungarian are two languages that evolved from the Proto-Uralic language family.
Some Slavic languages, like Russian and Ukrainian, use the Cyrillic alphabet.
Russian and Ukrainian are closely related languages, but they are not mutually intelligible. This means that while speakers of one language may be able to understand some words or phrases in the other language, they are not able to fully communicate without some difficulty.
The correct pronunciation of the word family in Ukrainian is Sim'ya. The actual Ukrainian word for family is ___'_. The Ukrainian language is part of a group of Slavic Languages.
There are three official languages in the Crimean Republic: Ukrainian, Russian, Tatar.
The Ukrainian word for "white" is "bilyy". The Ukrainian language has similarities to Russian and Polish languages, and is spoken by around 40 million people worldwide.
Hungarian: Bocsánat or Elnézést
he spoke hungarian
Hungarian is one language. Some books and missives in Hungarian (Magyar) have been translated. Others have not been translated.