Answer: Spanish is easier in the beginning but French becomes easier once you pick up the pronounciation. Other things to keep in mind: Spanish has two verbs for 'to be' while French has just one; Spanish has two words for 'for' while French has just one; and Spanish has a preterite tense which takes a lot of practice and memorisation to master while French does not have a preterite tense.
Many people agree that French is a harder language to learn than Spanish, but French grammar more closely mirrors English grammar than Spanish grammar does. It is far better, if you have to choose between studying French or Spanish that you choose the language that is more useful to you since the level of difficulty of both languages (assuming you know English) is roughly equivalent. For example, we are not contrasting Spanish and Arabic where Arabic is significantly harder to learn than Spanish.
If you didn't learn anything about Spanish after taking it for a year, I would definitely recommend taking french as I think its easier. French also has easier words and not many accents on the words so they are easier to remember.
the answer to french and spanish are the offcial language is principe.
It's for if you can't find a good translation. In this case you speak French and you want to know a word in Spanish.
No, "hola" is not French. It is a Spanish word that translates to "hello" in English.
Many people agree that French is a harder language to learn than Spanish, but French grammar more closely mirrors English grammar than Spanish grammar does. It is far better, if you have to choose between studying French or Spanish that you choose the language that is more useful to you since the level of difficulty of both languages (assuming you know English) is roughly equivalent. For example, we are not contrasting Spanish and Arabic where Arabic is significantly harder to learn than Spanish.
If you didn't learn anything about Spanish after taking it for a year, I would definitely recommend taking french as I think its easier. French also has easier words and not many accents on the words so they are easier to remember.
Italian, French and Spanish are all romance languages (they are in the same family). If I were you I would learn Spanish first, mostly because there are alot more places and people in the world that speak spanish than italian...but as far as ease of learning, they are about the same.
English
plus dur
French were from France, and Spanish were from Spain.
To learn to speak it, German is harder, yes.
mmm I guess you mean Portuguese not Brazilian. And yeah, portuguese is a little bit harder to pronounce than spanish.
French: émeraude Spanish: esmeralda
French: l'été Spanish: verano
French: 'laid' Spanish: 'feo'
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