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Understudied European languages

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Wilco
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 Message 1 of 85
13 December 2010 at 5:08pm | IP Logged 
Among all European national languages (excluding minority or regional languages like
Catalan, Basque, Corsican), which would you say are the less studied by foreign learners?
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Lianne
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 Message 2 of 85
13 December 2010 at 5:27pm | IP Logged 
Well, there are obviously some that are more studied by foreigners, such as Spanish, Italian, German, etc. I would say in general eastern European languages seem to be less studied. At least that's my experience, being a Canadian who doesn't know anyone who's studied a language other than the popular Romance languages and German (or occasionally Japanese).
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Merv
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 Message 3 of 85
13 December 2010 at 5:33pm | IP Logged 
Wilco wrote:
Among all European national languages (excluding minority or regional languages like
Catalan, Basque, Corsican), which would you say are the less studied by foreign learners?


Generally-speaking, the Celtic branch, Greek, Armenian, Albanian, Caucasus languages (e.g. Georgian, Abkhaz,
Ossetian, etc.), Finno-Ugric family, and the Slavic branch. The Slavic branch gets some decent study in Russian
and Polish but less so in the other languages.

I'm not sure what you mean by "regional languages"? All languages of countries that were not vast (colonial)
empires are in some sense regional. Japanese is regional, so are German and Italian. They are important because
they are vital exponents of science and technology and culture. But they are regional. More widespread European
languages such as English, French, Spanish, Portuguese, and Russian, get a high level of attention not only due to
their cultural significance but also because of their many speakers spread over a vast (formerly imperial, in many
cases) territory. Nobody would take Portuguese more seriously than Bulgarian if it weren't for Portugal's colonies
in Brazil and Africa vs. Bulgaria's restrictedness to the eastern Balkan peninsula.

Edited by Merv on 13 December 2010 at 5:37pm

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Cainntear
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 Message 4 of 85
13 December 2010 at 8:29pm | IP Logged 
I'd say a notable gap is the languages Scandinavia and the Netherlands. A fair number of people seem to start but never really get anywhere, simply because it's so easy to get by in English in these countries.
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Polyglot_gr
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 Message 5 of 85
13 December 2010 at 8:46pm | IP Logged 
Ukrainian is a good example of the degradation suffered by a major language that has not been an official language of any independent state for decades. Foreign learners treat Ukrainian as an inferior version of Russian, choosing to study the latter instead.
Finnish is another understudied language, mainly because of its notoriously difficult grammar and vocabulary.
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chucknorrisman
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 Message 6 of 85
13 December 2010 at 9:50pm | IP Logged 
Lithuanian, Latvian, Albanian, Romanian, all Slavic languages except Russian and to some extent Polish, Icelandic, Luxembourgish
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Levi
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 Message 7 of 85
13 December 2010 at 9:53pm | IP Logged 
Wilco wrote:
Among all European national languages (excluding minority or regional languages like Catalan, Basque, Corsican), which would you say are the less studied by foreign learners?

Catalan is the official language of Andorra.
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SamD
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 Message 8 of 85
14 December 2010 at 2:33am | IP Logged 
It depends on what you mean by "understudied." That word seems to suggest that some languages are "adequately studied." Maybe from time to time a language becomes chic or hot and is temporarily "overstudied." In my opinion, a language can't be overstudied.

Perhaps the most "understudied" languages are the ones with the largest number of native speakers and the smallest number of people learning them as native languages.

If we define "understudied" European languages that way, the answer might be Polish, Ukrainian or Dutch.


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