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Post by Napoleon Bonaparte on Nov 22, 2015 11:55:51 GMT
I heard once that the hardest language in the world is Afghan...
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Post by Jean Lannes on Nov 22, 2015 12:21:40 GMT
I heard once that the hardest language in the world is Afghan... It's similar to Persian (and I believe they also speak Persian there).
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Post by General William T. Sherman on Nov 22, 2015 12:23:36 GMT
I heard once that the hardest language in the world is Afghan... It's similar to Persian (and I believe they also speak Persian there). Persian and Afghan (Farsi and Parsi respectively I believe, I need to check Geography Now again) are extremely similar. It's almost like Spanish and Portuguese, Afghans and Persians can understand each other nearly perfectly. But anyways, this is the thread for Polish Language Lessons, we've gotten quite a bit off topic, so please go back to the subject. Thank you
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Post by Haelicon on Nov 22, 2015 12:40:05 GMT
The Last Stand Soldier, totally off topic, I'm sorry, but does "Do Broni" mean "Call to Arms" or something of that effect? I've always wondered. I thought Do Bron (as in Polish Propaganda Poster) means "To Front!"?
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Post by Jean Lannes on Nov 22, 2015 12:46:20 GMT
It's similar to Persian (and I believe they also speak Persian there). Persian and Afghan (Farsi and Parsi respectively I believe, I need to check Geography Now again) are extremely similar. It's almost like Spanish and Portuguese, Afghans and Persians can understand each other nearly perfectly. But anyways, this is the thread for Polish Language Lessons, we've gotten quite a bit off topic, so please go back to the subject. Thank you Last addition. Originally it was Parsi but since the Arabs didn't have a P they called them Farsi.
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Post by General William T. Sherman on Nov 22, 2015 13:46:00 GMT
The Last Stand Soldier, totally off topic, I'm sorry, but does "Do Broni" mean "Call to Arms" or something of that effect? I've always wondered. I thought Do Bron (as in Polish Propaganda Poster) means "To Front!"? I'm not sure, that's why I'm asking. Your guess is as good as mine.
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Post by Jean Lannes on Nov 22, 2015 13:59:02 GMT
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Post by The Last Stand Soldier on Nov 22, 2015 18:01:10 GMT
Lubię to - I like this/that
Yes, Polish language is one of the hardest in the world, because we have got very difficult grammar. But the hardest languages are Amhar, Persian, Afghan, Hindi, Hungarian, Danish, Japanese.
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Post by General William T. Sherman on Nov 22, 2015 18:09:29 GMT
Lubię to - I like this/that Yes, Polish language is one of the hardest in the world, because we have got very difficult grammar. But the hardest languages are Amhar, Persian, Afghan, Hindi, Hungarian, Danish, Japanese. I would guess that because Polish is in the same family group as Hungarian and Slovak, are those languages easier for you guys? Like how Italian is easier for a French speaker than an English speaker?
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Post by Jean Lannes on Nov 22, 2015 18:16:48 GMT
Lubię to - I like this/that Yes, Polish language is one of the hardest in the world, because we have got very difficult grammar. But the hardest languages are Amhar, Persian, Afghan, Hindi, Hungarian, Danish, Japanese. Did you ever see Turkish grammar? No articles
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Post by The Last Stand Soldier on Nov 22, 2015 21:56:18 GMT
Lubię to - I like this/that Yes, Polish language is one of the hardest in the world, because we have got very difficult grammar. But the hardest languages are Amhar, Persian, Afghan, Hindi, Hungarian, Danish, Japanese. I would guess that because Polish is in the same family group as Hungarian and Slovak, are those languages easier for you guys? Like how Italian is easier for a French speaker than an English speaker? Yes, Czech, Slovak, Hungarian and Russian, Belarussian, Ukrainian a bit are very easy for us and we can speak normal
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Post by Haelicon on Nov 22, 2015 22:26:07 GMT
Lubię to - I like this/that Yes, Polish language is one of the hardest in the world, because we have got very difficult grammar. But the hardest languages are Amhar, Persian, Afghan, Hindi, Hungarian, Danish, Japanese. I'd say the hardest are Afghan, Persian, Hindi, Finnish, and Chinese.
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Post by General William T. Sherman on Nov 22, 2015 23:13:10 GMT
I'd say the hardest languages are (one per each language group): Afghan Mandarin Hungarian Romanian English Finnish Turkish
I wish that it would be so that we (the American education system) taught more than one language in our developing years, I say we should've been taught the four most important languages of our hemisphere (English, Spanish, French, Portuguese). At least teach us two in our developing years.
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Post by Jean Lannes on Nov 23, 2015 0:38:03 GMT
I'd say the hardest languages are (one per each language group): Afghan Mandarin Hungarian Romanian English Finnish Turkish I wish that it would be so that we (the American education system) taught more than one language in our developing years, I say we should've been taught the four most important languages of our hemisphere (English, Spanish, French, Portuguese). At least teach us two in our developing years. In Switzerland you first learn German (were I grew up) 3rd Class: French 5th: English 8th: (if you want) Latin I believe you can also choose Italian in 8th or 9th grade Education system (new system is only 2 years old in my canton) 1-6 primar (primary) 7-9 sekundar (secondary) We have three different classes for each grade : A, E, P A being the "worst" E is middle P is the best (advanced classes) After "secondary" school you either begin with a work (learn it) or you go into a pre-university called Gymnasium. But enough with the off topic talk let's concentrate on Polish
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Post by General William T. Sherman on Nov 23, 2015 0:51:48 GMT
I'd say the hardest languages are (one per each language group): Afghan Mandarin Hungarian Romanian English Finnish Turkish I wish that it would be so that we (the American education system) taught more than one language in our developing years, I say we should've been taught the four most important languages of our hemisphere (English, Spanish, French, Portuguese). At least teach us two in our developing years. In Switzerland you first learn German (were I grew up) 3rd Class: French 5th: English 8th: (if you want) Latin I believe you can also choose Italian in 8th or 9th grade Education system (new system is only 2 years old in my canton) 1-6 primar (primary) 7-9 sekundar (secondary) We have three different classes for each grade : A, E, P A being the "worst" E is middle P is the best (advanced classes) After "secondary" school you either begin with a work (learn it) or you go into a pre-university called Gymnasium. But enough with the off topic talk let's concentrate on Polish Yes, I'll message you about this.
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