paparaciii Diglot Senior Member Latvia Joined 6338 days ago 204 posts - 223 votes Speaks: Latvian*, Russian Studies: English
| Message 25 of 60 28 January 2010 at 9:19am | IP Logged |
goosefrabbas wrote:
Russian is 8th. There aren't any other Balto-Slavic languages on the top 20 list, but I'm sure that knowing Russian would make it easy to communicate with people who speak Ukrainian, Serbo-Croatian, Czech, Slovak, Slovene, Polish, Belarusian, Lithuanian, Latvian, Bulgarian, etc. |
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Only if the speakers of those languages have learned Russian or a Russian speaker has learned those languages you mentioned. Otherwise - no no no, my dear friend.
But I certainly emphasize that it depends on what do you mean by "communicate". Because I have discovered that if I use some improvised sign language, I can communicate even with my dog...
My 2 cents.
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zooplah Diglot Senior Member United States zooplah.farvista.net Joined 6370 days ago 100 posts - 116 votes Speaks: English*, Esperanto Studies: German
| Message 26 of 60 01 February 2010 at 6:13pm | IP Logged |
QiuJP wrote:
if you want to communicate with:
90%, 95%, 99% of the world's population in their native language?
How would have the number of languages that you need changed if you want to communicate with the same percentages of the world's population, and you include the usage of L2? |
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I don't know if that would even be possible. A large quantity of languages are spoken by isolated peoples that you'd probably not have anything to say to anyway. Also, a large quantity of languages are only spoken, but not written, so you'd have a bit of a problem there.
Personally, I wouldn't want to. I irritate enough people in my native tongue, so I don't see why I'd want to learn enough to irritate 90% of the people of the world.
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Al3 Tetraglot Newbie Mexico Joined 5550 days ago 3 posts - 4 votes Speaks: Spanish*, Portuguese, English, French Studies: Italian
| Message 27 of 60 01 February 2010 at 7:33pm | IP Logged |
I think being able to speak fluently 3 or 4 of the most spoken languages in the world would do, since many of that 90% could speak one of those languages, if not native, at least as a second or third language, so you'll be able to comunicate.
Greetings!
Edited by Al3 on 01 February 2010 at 7:36pm
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re4lover Groupie Egypt Joined 5439 days ago 63 posts - 66 votes Speaks: Arabic (Egyptian)* Studies: English, Russian, Modern Hebrew, Aramaic
| Message 28 of 60 01 February 2010 at 7:40pm | IP Logged |
I'm just wish to learn English and Russian at the first place
then I will choose French
I guess that I want to learn more and more of languages
but for now
English , Russian:)
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Sennin Senior Member Bulgaria Joined 6036 days ago 1457 posts - 1759 votes 5 sounds
| Message 29 of 60 01 February 2010 at 11:32pm | IP Logged |
paparaciii wrote:
goosefrabbas wrote:
Russian is 8th. There aren't any other Balto-Slavic languages on the top 20 list, but I'm sure that knowing Russian would make it easy to communicate with people who speak Ukrainian, Serbo-Croatian, Czech, Slovak, Slovene, Polish, Belarusian, Lithuanian, Latvian, Bulgarian, etc. |
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Only if the speakers of those languages have learned Russian or a Russian speaker has learned those languages you mentioned. Otherwise - no no no, my dear friend.
But I certainly emphasize that it depends on what do you mean by "communicate". Because I have discovered that if I use some improvised sign language, I can communicate even with my dog...
My 2 cents. |
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It's a common misconception that all Slavic languages are sort of the same and once you know Russian you know'em all ;).
Edited by Sennin on 01 February 2010 at 11:49pm
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Levi Pentaglot Senior Member United States Joined 5569 days ago 2268 posts - 3328 votes Speaks: English*, French, Esperanto, German, Spanish Studies: Russian, Dutch, Portuguese, Mandarin, Japanese, Italian
| Message 30 of 60 02 February 2010 at 4:06am | IP Logged |
It is also a common misconception that Lithuanian and Latvian are closely related to Russian. They're not.
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goosefrabbas Triglot Pro Member United States Joined 6370 days ago 393 posts - 475 votes Speaks: English*, French, Spanish Studies: German, Italian Personal Language Map
| Message 31 of 60 02 February 2010 at 4:08am | IP Logged |
Looks like I've learned quite a few things here. :)
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Antiprism Newbie United Kingdom Joined 5418 days ago 6 posts - 6 votes Speaks: English*
| Message 32 of 60 02 February 2010 at 10:43am | IP Logged |
lichtrausch wrote:
m32amir wrote:
In other words although learning exotic languages like Chinese or Hindi it's getting popular, these 5 languages (EN, FR, GER, SPA, ITA) are always gonna be widely used.
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In 50 years I'd be surprised if even 1% of the world population learns Italian as a foreign language. Even now Italian is hardly used outside of Italy and it's only going to go downhill from here. |
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We've already had a discussion along these lines in another thread: just because Italian isn't useful for AMERICANS doesn't mean it's not a useful language. Italian is more useful for Europeans than Spanish, for the very good reasons that 1. there are more Italians than there are Spanish people, 2. the Italian economy is stronger than the Spanish and 3. It's a national language of Switzerland, a country with an extremely high quality of life.
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