I know English, Spanish, and study Korean.
1. What are the easiest languages to learn for people fluent in English or Spanish. (As in what language is the most similar to each individually).
2. Which languages are the most useful to learn?
3. What languages does /pol/ know?
4. Which languages do you want to learn / find the most appealing.
>>79037244
alien flag
All West European languages should be fairly easy.
>/pol/
Back to >>>/r/The_Donald
>>79037244
1 - Any language of Latin or Germanic origin, in particular I'd say that the closest to the ones you said are Portuguese and Dutch.
2 - That depends on what you deem "useful".
3 - /pol/ Knows English only.
4 - I would like to pick-up French again, since it would open up a deeper understanding of a few literates and philosophers. Other than that, any language, really.
>>79037244
1.
Romance languages and Germanic languages too
2. English as a lingua franca, Chinese for trade and Spanish I guess
3. God's English
4. Would like to learn russian given as I'm Bulgarian and it would aid understanding shit better but it's too much work right now and I think 4 languages are enough
>>79037244
1. Portuguese
2. Arabic
3. meme
4. Python, C++, Java
>>79037244
The alien is trying to understand our languages to apply his subversive tactics
1. Any romance language
2. I would say probably Chinese or Spanish, because if you know those three you can speak to roughly 1/4 of the world without issues, probably more
3. English and Korean
4. I want to learn Japanese due to how easy it is after knowing Korean and I want to also pick up Mandarin or Cantonese