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European languages and engineering...

 Language Learning Forum : Languages & Work Post Reply
11 messages over 2 pages: 1 2  Next >>
seemewoo
Newbie
United Kingdom
Joined 4356 days ago

21 posts - 22 votes

 
 Message 1 of 11
12 January 2013 at 12:45am | IP Logged 
hey!

So I am currently learning Spanish and I just wanted to ask as a student studying electrical engineering and wanting to work across Europe, what would be the best languages to know? would it be German? or best off learning Catalan or something?
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sillygoose1
Tetraglot
Senior Member
United States
Joined 4424 days ago

566 posts - 814 votes 
Speaks: English*, Italian, Spanish, French
Studies: German, Latin

 
 Message 2 of 11
12 January 2013 at 4:23am | IP Logged 
For engineering, I'd say French, German, & Russian.
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Cavesa
Triglot
Senior Member
Czech Republic
Joined 4797 days ago

3277 posts - 6779 votes 
Speaks: Czech*, FrenchC2, EnglishC1
Studies: Spanish, German, Italian

 
 Message 3 of 11
12 January 2013 at 12:35pm | IP Logged 
Well, I would say German, French or the Scandinavian languages (Cristina was saying on
the forum that the north is looking for engineers). Russian only if you want to live in
Russia, but in the states of the EU it's quite useless. (Well with the exception of
Estonia, Latvia and Lithunia perhaps)

Another interesing choice would be a language like Czech or Polish. The salaries are in
general lower than in Germany or so, but there is demand for engineers and they can earn
good money too.
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Gosiak
Triglot
Senior Member
Poland
Joined 4914 days ago

241 posts - 361 votes 
Speaks: Polish*, English, German
Studies: Norwegian, Welsh

 
 Message 4 of 11
12 January 2013 at 12:41pm | IP Logged 
Cavesa wrote:

Another interesing choice would be a language like Czech or Polish. The salaries are in
general lower than in Germany or so, but there is demand for engineers and they can earn
good money too.


This will not be a decent sum by European standards.
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stifa
Triglot
Senior Member
Norway
lang-8.com/448715
Joined 4661 days ago

629 posts - 813 votes 
Speaks: Norwegian*, EnglishC2, German
Studies: Japanese, Spanish

 
 Message 5 of 11
12 January 2013 at 12:41pm | IP Logged 
I can confirm that there is a great demand for engineers here in Norway, and I've heard
about some having a 600,000 kroner annual salary (well, before the State put their
drinking straw into your wallet) after less than ten years of experience.

Don't know if they pay foreign engineers that much though...
I'm definitely returning to Norway after I get my engineering degree unless the demand
ceases to be.

Edited by stifa on 12 January 2013 at 12:42pm

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seemewoo
Newbie
United Kingdom
Joined 4356 days ago

21 posts - 22 votes

 
 Message 6 of 11
12 January 2013 at 1:46pm | IP Logged 
What about the languages for everything within Europe that's to the left of Germany, i don't really want to work in the Scandinavian countries, nor the eastern European countries. however i would also go work within South America so what languages are used predominantly there? is it just Spanish and Portuguese?

So what are the best languages to learn for these places?

as i will graduate within either 4 years from september of this year or 6-7 years depending on whether i do a masters/doctorate after my initial degree. so letes say i can either have 4 languages (one per year) or 6 languages (one per year) which ones would be most important?
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hrhenry
Octoglot
Senior Member
United States
languagehopper.blogs
Joined 4918 days ago

1871 posts - 3642 votes 
Speaks: English*, SpanishC2, ItalianC2, Norwegian, Catalan, Galician, Turkish, Portuguese
Studies: Polish, Indonesian, Ojibwe

 
 Message 7 of 11
12 January 2013 at 2:00pm | IP Logged 
seemewoo wrote:

as i will graduate within either 4 years from september of this year or 6-7 years
depending on whether i do a masters/doctorate after my initial degree. so letes say i
can either have 4 languages (one per year) or 6 languages (one per year) which ones
would be most important?

Whichever language(s) you plan on studying, I'd suggest just one or two. If you're
jumping to another language every year, none of them will be at a high enough level to
use in a work environment.

R.
==
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seemewoo
Newbie
United Kingdom
Joined 4356 days ago

21 posts - 22 votes

 
 Message 8 of 11
12 January 2013 at 2:08pm | IP Logged 
hmm i suppose, didnt benny learn German to very close to C2 level within three months? so why cant i learn a language to C2 level within a year, 4 times a what he had?

Would it a good idea to learn say Spanish then french then German first? are these the most widely spoken across Europe? then would it be sensible to learn Italian and Portuguese? or instead learn catalan?


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