It really depends on the school you go to.
I had to learn English from 5th to 10th grade, than I had to choose a second foreign language in either 5th or 7th grade. This is what you have to learn, but if you want to you can learn a whole bunch more.
Marie Agnesi was known to have been proficient in multiple languages, including Italian, Latin, Greek, Hebrew, French, German, and Spanish. She was a polyglot and excelled in linguistics.
A person who can speak multiple languages is considered to be Multilingual, bilingual (two languages), trilingual (three languages), etc. A name for people who are multilingual and easily learn languages is Polyglot.
Some languages that are derived from the German language include Dutch, Afrikaans, and Yiddish. These languages share similarities in vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation with German due to historical linguistic connections.
Four languages in total......Dutch, English, Spanish and German
German IMO, although they are close in some ways. Many Spanish words seem to have English roots which makes it a little easier. Spanish is Latin and many English words are from Latin. For example Quadro for quad. But the hardest languages are Ukrainian and languages that not only are long, but by the way you pronounce the words.
Kenyan children learn many different languages. Kenya is a multi-language country, Swahili and English being it's offical languages. However, there is 62 languages spoken in Kenya.
There are several online sites where you can learn German and many other languages while you're at it! when it says ie its pronounced ee and when it says ei its pronounced ii.
There should be no mandatory reason a child has to learn German unless for some specific geograpic requirements but here in the United States they try to emphasize the broad European languages like French and German but now even Japanese is being introduced. The idea is that children are mentally more open and capable of learning a foreign language than an adult. The only reason I can think it would be mandatory is if in the child's curriculum they are studying a play that has many German words or something similar to that much like Latin plays.
Marie Agnesi was known to have been proficient in multiple languages, including Italian, Latin, Greek, Hebrew, French, German, and Spanish. She was a polyglot and excelled in linguistics.
It depends on how many languages you would want to learn, or how many you can take.
A person who can speak multiple languages is considered to be Multilingual, bilingual (two languages), trilingual (three languages), etc. A name for people who are multilingual and easily learn languages is Polyglot.
They speak an abridged version of German. It is called low German, and it tends to be a mix of various languages, but is based on German. Some also speak what they call 'low German,' and this is an older version of actual German.
You already know 1 language there are 6,499 left to learn ,there are 6,500 languages In the world today.
Hello! When I sterted the German language, the only thing I found difficult was rolling my "R". Many words in the German language are similar to words in the English language since both English and German are Germanic languages, meaning that they are related. I find German slightly similar to Swedish, Finnish and Norwegian. I can also recognise words in Dutch, as both Dutch and German are similar languages.
There are 6 commonly spoken languages in Germany: German, Turkish, Polish, Serbo-Crotation, and Dutch. These are the common ones. There are many more.
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.
As many as they are able to learn.