Why do people think English is the hardest language to learn?

Eremiel

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Apr 24, 2008
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Julianking93 said:
Never heard that before.

I've only ever heard that Japanese is the hardest language to learn.
Bullcrap. Japanese is piss-easy to learn. So's English.
 

Dags90

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I think it's a clear sign that something has gone wrong when proper spelling becomes a form of competition. I've heard Icelandic is hard to learn.
 

RMcD94

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The only people saying English is hard are the people who learned it as a mother language.

Does this surprise anyone?

No.

Let's move on then.
 

warprincenataku

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Jan 28, 2010
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Compared to most other languages, it is the hardest language out there.

Just take a look at tenses for example. English has 12 base tenses plus 3 for a total of 15. Some people say English actually has upwards of 22 tenses, look it up. Where as Thai has one tense and one tense only. Sure you can add the word 'will' to make it future, or the Thai equivalent of 'ing' to make it progressive, but for the most part Thai only has one tense.

Also, English has plural nouns which some languages don't have. Again, Thai doesn't have plurals either.

English has articles, a, an and the which isn't used in many languages either.

Most languages have their own idioms and expressions, but English idioms are some of the most difficult to grasp. If you looked up each individual word in a dictionary you would get nothing but a direct translation.

I teach English here in Thailand and trust me, for students not growing up with English in their household it can be a most difficult language to learn. I have some students who study Japanese, Chinese and Korean as well and they still think English is the hardest.


EDIT: I agree with a previous poster, English is not difficult to learn, but it is quite difficult to master.
 

asinann

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I just thought while reading through a few other threads about how a simple misspelling of a word is capable of changing the meaning of a sentence by changing just one key word. The new word may be spelled properly (since and sense, a lot of people screw this one up and in some cases when swapped can make a sentence that means something, just completely different things.)
 
Feb 13, 2008
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Gildan Bladeborn said:
Which is not to say a sentence with the word "Buffalo" 5 times in a row is not gibberish, but at least you can actually parse that one together.
It's like the idea of pronouncing "fish" as ghoti; it's a nonsensical argument, using strict grammatical sense.
 

warprincenataku

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"I take it you already know of tough and bough and cough and dough? Others may stumble, but not you, on hiccough, thorough, laugh and through. Well done! And now you wish, perhaps, to learn of less familiar traps? Beware of heard, a dreadful word, that looks like beard and sounds like bird. And dead -- it's said like bed not bead -- and for goodness' sake don't call it deed! Watch out for meat and great and threat (They rhyme with suite and straight and debt) A moth is not the moth in mother, nor both in bother, broth in brother. And here is not a match for there, nor dear and fear for bear and pear. And then there's dose and rose and lose -- just look them up -- and goose and choose, and cork and work and card and ward, and font and front and word and sword, and do and go and thwart and cart -- come, come I've hardly made a start. A dreadful language? Man alive. I'd mastered it when I was five. (author?) "
 

pauloalbatross

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Wicky_42 said:
sageoftruth said:
Then there's the issue with plurals. "Octopuses? Don't you mean octopi?" "Deers? I believe you meant to say 'deer'." There's just so many rules with exceptions in english, and almost no explanation as to why they exist.
Well, Octopi is because it's a Greek or Latin word, and so borrows from their grammatical rules. But at least there's only one gender of the word, so that's only one exception to pick up and not a whole table of them ;)
It's actually should be octopodes - it is a Greek noun and would decline in that way if people weren't so lazy when learning English (hence octopuses being the accepted form). The problem with English plurals is that the words being pluralized come from so many different languages that people give up on learning the original way and come up with their own methods.
 

SideburnsPuppy

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May 23, 2009
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Let's just take an arbitrary example of language: possessive adjectives. (Actually, it's not arbitrary: it's the only area of French I know with great confidence that also proves my point.)

In French, the singular possessive adjectives are mon, ma, mes (first person), ton, ta, tes (second person), son, sa, and ses (third person). The words ending with "-on" are masculine, "-a" is feminine (which draws a parallel with the feminine adjective equivalent to English "the"), and "-es" is plural (also drawing a parallel to the plural adjective equivalent to the English "the"). We can assume that the words beginning with "M" are first-person, because "moi" is the objective first-person pronoun, same with the second-person adjectives beginning with the same letters as both the second-person objective and subjective pronouns. The third-person possessive adjective begins with the same letter as the third-person reflective.

Now, let's switch to English. The first-person possessive, "my" is very similar to the first person objective pronoun, "me." The second-person "your" and "you" are very similar as well. However, "our" and "us" are very loosely connected. Also "my" is nowhere near connected "your" or "our." "Your" and "our" are connected spelling-wise, but considering them in any way similar phonetically would be ludicrous.

So, yeah. It can get pretty complicated, but learning a second language is in general hard. I just picked the right thing to analyze, and did it in an overly-analytical way so that hopefully your eyes would glaze over and you would think it more complicated than it actually is. So I guess I'm being dishonest. Sorry!
 

Weaver

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Apr 28, 2008
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Everyone I know who has learned English said it was the easiest language they've learned.
 

zHellas

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Feb 7, 2010
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KeyMaster45 said:
of the hardest up there with German
I took German I & German II as a sophomore, and I found the only hard parts are identifying the Subject & Object, and these: im, am, ins, in.

The latter(im am ins in) being harder by just a bit.
 

MikailCaboose

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DarkLordofDevon said:
MikailCaboose said:
DarkLordofDevon said:
Japanese is actually really easy. All the 'letters' only have a single sound. E.g. Ka is always pronaunced 'kah'. However a in English can be 'ah' as in cat, 'ay' as in cake etc.
The difficult problem with Japanese is the fact that all of the characters each have their own meaning, which when combined in a word can completely change the meaning of the character as opposed to it just remaining separate.
Only the Kanji have their own meaning, and there are over 10,000 so even most Japanese don't know them all. You just need the important ones like 'water'. Hiragana and Katakana are just those straight forward sounds.
Ah...Well then...
You sir, have made me look like a fool and are to be commended for that.
I wasn't aware that that only really applied to Kanji so thanks for the info.
 

RMcD94

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Nov 25, 2009
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RAKtheUndead said:
RMcD94 said:
The only people saying English is hard are the people who learned it as a mother language.

Does this surprise anyone?

No.

Let's move on then.
None of us know any other languages, though. Places where English is the predominant language seem to be rather poor when it comes to learning foreign languages - except for Canada, with their bilingual province of Quebec.
It's probably because there's no obvious practical reason to learning a language that gets taught as a second language in pretty much the entire Western world.
 

Vianyte

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Jan 10, 2009
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You haven't realised the English language is retarded?

By retarded, I mean uses no pattern, random exceptions, spellings that don't fit with pronunciations, etc.
 

Ishamel

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Jan 12, 2010
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As someone who did Old Saxon at university, nothing in English is frightening to me anymore. And for those who complain that it isn't phonetically spelt, and languages like french are - ever been to somewhere in France that isn't Paris and asked for bread? In the Pyrenees, it isn't pronounced pan, it's pronounced peng. On a good day. Phonetics is all very well for Received Pronunciation speakers, but it leaves the Glaswegians and Americans hanging. No-one ought to claim that the way we write a language has anything to do with how it is said. Ask the chinese.
 

Aerosmith250

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Jul 22, 2009
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Outright Villainy said:
KeyMaster45 said:
Americans just kinda went bat-shit crazy with the language and have bastardized it enough to where its nearly considered a new language. So, yeah that's your "wtf?" fact for the day kiddies.
I find that a little hard to believe. American English has replaced a good few words sure, but the structure still applies wholesale, and a brittish and an American would have absolutely no trouble understanding each other, save for a few clarifications. It's just a different Dialect.
Hell, I know many dialects even that are radically different. If I wanted to use my Munster/Connaught Irish when talking to someone speaking Ulster Irish I'd find them completely unintelligible. Half the words are pronounced completely differently, and those are the ones that are spelt the same.
Uk English and American English are barely different.
Yeah Irish is a ***** that way, but even hiberno english (the dialect of english spoken in ireland) can be hard for others to understand, one of my friends is an american exchange student who often hasn't a clue what I'm talking about. Part of the problem could be that the standardised english tought in schools around the worls is quite regulated and easy to learn but then when you go out and talk to people the language can often be completely different. I found that when trying to learn Mandarin at least...