H4run
Deity
I really hope so, but I cannot get easy with my English, as it growing to be more crucial for both my life and future than my own language.
The thing is, you should always get enough of a relatively pure communication in your native language. You're probably overdoing the English a bit, too.
That's easier said than done sometimes.
I rarely use German at all at the moment.
Yes, this happens. Dinnae fash yoursel's.Agreed with the others. That sort of stuff happened to me all the time when I was taking German/French/Spanish classes back-to-back-to-back. They'll partition eventually and it'll get much easier with time.
If things had gone right when your ancestors came to borrow some bicycles, that wouldn't be the case.That's easier said than done sometimes.
I rarely use German at all at the moment.
Greek, Arabic, Gaelic, Finnish, or any language from India, if you're brave enough.I don't know what language to learn after Mongolian (I plan on taking it next year in Germany and continuing with it). I will always feel linguistically inferior unless I know a bare minimum of five languages, and besides, I love language. The trouble is that I like the ones that won't do me much good and am disinterested in the useful ones. Hungarian, Lithuanian, Breton, and Georgian are all pretty exciting and top my list. Russian's a nice balance of useful and interesting. Arabic is also very useful but slightly less cool. Occitan isn't very useful, but it at least would give me a nice start on other Romance languages if I ever had to learn them, since it's so similar to most of them.
Arabic is also very useful but slightly less cool.
You wouldn't believe it, but practically all languages are indigenous to the place where they're spoken.Try an indigenous language like Nahuatl or Quechua.
Interesting.An advice from me, unless you have a really urgent need to learn Arabic, or you have a huge motivation and commitment to learn it, forget Arabic. The grammar is horribly difficult, not to mention the pronunciation, and there are a very distinguishable difference between the classic fusha(h) (for art, religious exegesis, philosophy, etc) and standard Arabic (and each regions difference from one and another).
You wouldn't believe it, but some Greeks insist on speaking Greek, even in spite of centuries of Tourkish occupation.haroon said:For classical studies I guess Latin and Greek is crucial, but I think for me it is too risky to invest my time to these two language, because it is only highly use in academical field, but I don't think it have a wide influence in our contemporary time in comparison with Arabic, English and Russian.
You wouldn't believe it, but some Greeks insist on speaking Greek, even in spite of centuries of Tourkish occupation.