Esperanto was a nice idea, but if I remember right it was designed by a Finn and losely based on Finnish, a language with about 15 fricatives. I'm not sure English even has 5, and some languages don't have any. In terms of pronunciation it's not brilliant for everyone to learn.finiii said:Esperanto would be fitting as it was constructed to be an international language.
But I would pick whatever the vogon language is called. Poetry classes will be mandatory.
You, Sir (or Madam) have just won the internet.The Pinray said:Laughter, of course! It already is, so why change it!![]()
Zamenhof was Polish, not Finnish. And Esperanto has eight fricatives and very standardized pronunciation overall.ExileNZ said:Esperanto was a nice idea, but if I remember right it was designed by a Finn and losely based on Finnish, a language with about 15 fricatives. I'm not sure English even has 5, and some languages don't have any. In terms of pronunciation it's not brilliant for everyone to learn.
Yeah, that pissed me off. I have friends in Gibraltar who regularly slip into spanish, so spanish would be good to learn. Nope, french.Bvenged said:English - alongside your native language. I would also impose learning a third language of choice in all of the schools on Earth. Though that wouldn't be mandatory, just an early-school option.
Currently in the UK you learn either French, Spanish, German and sometimes Latin, but you rarely get a choice on which one you do: the school decides for you and it's mandatory.
I had to learn Spanish in my first school, with Japanese, Italian and Russian an hour a week on the side. I only wanted to do German out of the taught languages at the time. When I moved I was forced into Welsh and French instead - my own countries language I had just 2 years, at 1 lesson a week, to become competent in while everyone around me had been doing it for 10 years+. French - I just couldn't give a damn about. Never has interested me.
None of those went well and all I can blame is the UK school system. Give students CHOICE in the languages they learn, or they will look at "languages" on their school time tables as "Free's".
Why don't UK schools offer more, like Greek? Spiralling off topic ftw!
I come from an Urdu speaking background, and while I can't give you any specific examples, (I don't speak it well myself, but can sort of understand it) but I've seen plenty of times where a Tv show, or picture or something has been hilarious. Languages all serve a common purpose, to enable us to communicate. Humor is one of the most basic human ... (can't think of the right word, but you know what I mean), all languages are able to express creativity and sarcasm and whatnot.trty00 said:I'm going with English. My reasoning is a bit odd, but here goes... English has the best sense of humor. It's just so witty. To my knowledge, there's just no other language that has such a great potential for creativity. And,as far as I know, no other language has the awesome grasp of sarcasm, and irony, that we do. I know, that sounds weird, but that's just me.
P.S: If I'm incorrect in my assumptions, please let me know.![]()
Isn't Japanese is widely regarded as one of the most difficult languages to learn? I seem to remember hearing that somewhere. I might be wrong, though.Justank said:Japanese, having learned it as a second language I consider it much simpler and easier to learn than English. For the most part, it's straightforward. Also particles are awesome.