certainly does have genders. — tim wood
English is probably not the absolute easiest language to learn. I have heard that a language called Esperanto is the easiest but that’s only because the language was basically invented in the 19th century for pretty much the sole purpose of being easy to learn. — TheHedoMinimalist
I think a lot depends on the prospective learner's native language and how it differs from or how similar it is to English. — baker
Parasitic: many loan words, especially those that have a critical role in life, politics, religion, etc. and so other languages lose their edge: what would've made it important to learn another language is anglicized (is that the right word?) — TheMadFool
schadenfreuide — Benj96
Of course.Well think in the sense of structure. Would it be easier to go from a highly structured and grammatical language (like German) where say every noun has a gender and every adjective has to agree with it as well as each pronoun having a unique verb conjugation (even the in German must agree with gender and plural/singular = there’s like a dozen “the’s”!) to one where much of that doesn’t matter: you just learn a few basic conjugations and the nouns (like English).
Or would it be easier for an English speaker to go to a language with higher structure many of which are not natural or inherent to the functioning of their own language.
How does one learn a concept it doesn’t have in its own means of describing the world? — Benj96
Loaning words from other languages is one way. Another way is the formation of new words (but this depends a lot on the word formation models already available in the language -- some have more of those, some fewer).How does a language master it’s descriptive power? — Benj96
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