it's easier to learn french. the English language is the most difficult language on the planet.
The easiest language for English speakers to learn tends to be languages that share similarities in grammar and vocabulary. For English speakers, Spanish, French, and Dutch are often considered relatively easier languages to learn due to their similarities in vocabulary and sentence structure.
Languages that share similar grammar structures and vocabulary with English, such as Spanish, French, or Dutch, may be easier to learn for English speakers. Additionally, languages like Esperanto or Indonesian are designed to be simple and may be easier to pick up. Ultimately, the best language to learn will depend on your personal interests and goals.
French is generally considered easier for English speakers to learn than Sanskrit due to its grammatical similarities to English and more widespread use in the modern world. Sanskrit, on the other hand, is a highly complex and ancient language with a rich literary tradition, making it more challenging for beginners.
French is heavily influenced by Latin, but also by Germanic languages. It shares a number of roots with English. English speakers will discover interesting things about their own language when learning French - as French speakers do about French when they learn English. Learning a few hundred French words (the commonest ones if possible) should be easy for English speakers. And it should be enough to get your message trough, even if your grammar is bad.
Both German and French have their difficulties. This is also a matter of personal background, but both French or German vocabularies are reasonably easy to learn for an English speaker. I tend to think that German grammar is rather hard to master.
The easiest language for English speakers to learn tends to be languages that share similarities in grammar and vocabulary. For English speakers, Spanish, French, and Dutch are often considered relatively easier languages to learn due to their similarities in vocabulary and sentence structure.
French. If you speak English, French has easier writing and grammar; Japanese has easier pronunciation.
Only French children should be made to learn French. While children should be made to learn a foreign language, that language should be one of the wolds major languages and French is not one of these. For native English speakers, Spanish or Chinese would be more appropriate, for non English speakers, English should be the language taught.
Languages that share similar grammar structures and vocabulary with English, such as Spanish, French, or Dutch, may be easier to learn for English speakers. Additionally, languages like Esperanto or Indonesian are designed to be simple and may be easier to pick up. Ultimately, the best language to learn will depend on your personal interests and goals.
Certainly. There are a great number of long-term advantages to learn a foreign language. One of them is that French and English languages share common roots and influences, and that makes French easier to master (most noticeably the vocabulary) for English speakers.
French is generally considered easier for English speakers to learn than Sanskrit due to its grammatical similarities to English and more widespread use in the modern world. Sanskrit, on the other hand, is a highly complex and ancient language with a rich literary tradition, making it more challenging for beginners.
French is heavily influenced by Latin, but also by Germanic languages. It shares a number of roots with English. English speakers will discover interesting things about their own language when learning French - as French speakers do about French when they learn English. Learning a few hundred French words (the commonest ones if possible) should be easy for English speakers. And it should be enough to get your message trough, even if your grammar is bad.
Both German and French have their difficulties. This is also a matter of personal background, but both French or German vocabularies are reasonably easy to learn for an English speaker. I tend to think that German grammar is rather hard to master.
Both French and Russian have sounds that are not found in English, so an English speaker will have to learn how to pronounce these sounds. It is difficult for an English speaker to learn how to pronounce either language correctly, and they will most likely have an accent. Both French and Russian have grammatical features that are difficult for an English speaker. These include: different word order, the use of grammatical gender, and remebering to decline adjectives, and different patterns of verb conjugation. However, Russian has more features that will be alien to an English speaker, such as: perfective verbs, the Cyrillic alphabet, three grammatical genders (French has only two), and grammatical case for nouns and adjectives. The Russian stress pattern is harder to learn than French and the rules of Russian spelling are more complicated than those of French. French also has a great many words of vocabulary that it shares with English, making this aspect a little easer for English speakers. Russian has fewer of these words. For these reasons, the average English speaker will probably find French easier to learn than Russian. But that isn't necessarily true of all English speakers. Somebody who already speaks a langauge closely related to Russian - Polish or Ukranian for example - is likely to find Russian easier.
French is probably the easier language. Some words even sound like the English ones.
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
For a native English speaker, Spanish is generally considered easier to learn as a second language compared to French. This is because Spanish has simpler grammar rules, more regular pronunciation, and many cognates (words that are similar in both languages).