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  3. We went in search of the world’s hardest language

We went in search of the world’s hardest language

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  • lproven@social.vivaldi.netL This user is from outside of this forum
    lproven@social.vivaldi.netL This user is from outside of this forum
    lproven@social.vivaldi.net
    wrote last edited by
    #1

    We went in search of the world’s hardest language

    https://medium.economist.com/we-went-in-search-of-the-worlds-hardest-language-95a27c2cff3

    English is pretty simple. Learning to speak Ubykh or !Xóõ presents more of a challenge

    <- The Economist, 2016

    jmax@mastodon.socialJ taf@bsd.networkT 2 Replies Last reply
    1
    0
    • lproven@social.vivaldi.netL lproven@social.vivaldi.net

      We went in search of the world’s hardest language

      https://medium.economist.com/we-went-in-search-of-the-worlds-hardest-language-95a27c2cff3

      English is pretty simple. Learning to speak Ubykh or !Xóõ presents more of a challenge

      <- The Economist, 2016

      jmax@mastodon.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
      jmax@mastodon.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
      jmax@mastodon.social
      wrote last edited by
      #2

      @lproven Curious: did they consider Chinese? The tonal quality always impressed me (in my near total ignorance) as hard.

      lproven@social.vivaldi.netL 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • jmax@mastodon.socialJ jmax@mastodon.social

        @lproven Curious: did they consider Chinese? The tonal quality always impressed me (in my near total ignorance) as hard.

        lproven@social.vivaldi.netL This user is from outside of this forum
        lproven@social.vivaldi.netL This user is from outside of this forum
        lproven@social.vivaldi.net
        wrote last edited by
        #3

        @jmax It really is. But it's just 2 skills: hearing the tones, & making the tones. (I am extremely poor at both.) And of course there is also the famously complex writing system.

        The language itself, its grammar and so on, is actually one of the simplest I've ever even learned a few sentences of.

        The thing is that it's an N-dimensional problem. The things that make 1 particular language hard are often unique to that language (or family thereof), and in other ways it may be extremely simple.

        At a basic level Japanese grammar is also very very simple. But counting is very complicated (there are no plurals, for a start, AIUI) & register (politeness, manners) are both very complex & very very important.

        (AIUI, the main thing that differentiates Malaysian & Indonesian is register.)

        Register is a big deal. It doesn't matter much in English. We even got rid of thee & thou & the associated verb forms.

        You need dozens of axes to define the bits that are difficult/easy.

        Some of the famous ones are only difficult in a few ways.

        The really tricky languages are tricky in _lots of different ways at once_.

        If Chinese is really hard in 2 ways, say (tones & script), then some are hard in 10 or 15 ways at once.

        There is a fascinating visualisation exercise in here somewhere.

        jmax@mastodon.socialJ tschenkel@mathstodon.xyzT a_cubed@mastodon.socialA M 4 Replies Last reply
        0
        • lproven@social.vivaldi.netL lproven@social.vivaldi.net

          @jmax It really is. But it's just 2 skills: hearing the tones, & making the tones. (I am extremely poor at both.) And of course there is also the famously complex writing system.

          The language itself, its grammar and so on, is actually one of the simplest I've ever even learned a few sentences of.

          The thing is that it's an N-dimensional problem. The things that make 1 particular language hard are often unique to that language (or family thereof), and in other ways it may be extremely simple.

          At a basic level Japanese grammar is also very very simple. But counting is very complicated (there are no plurals, for a start, AIUI) & register (politeness, manners) are both very complex & very very important.

          (AIUI, the main thing that differentiates Malaysian & Indonesian is register.)

          Register is a big deal. It doesn't matter much in English. We even got rid of thee & thou & the associated verb forms.

          You need dozens of axes to define the bits that are difficult/easy.

          Some of the famous ones are only difficult in a few ways.

          The really tricky languages are tricky in _lots of different ways at once_.

          If Chinese is really hard in 2 ways, say (tones & script), then some are hard in 10 or 15 ways at once.

          There is a fascinating visualisation exercise in here somewhere.

          jmax@mastodon.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
          jmax@mastodon.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
          jmax@mastodon.social
          wrote last edited by
          #4

          @lproven tx

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • lproven@social.vivaldi.netL lproven@social.vivaldi.net

            We went in search of the world’s hardest language

            https://medium.economist.com/we-went-in-search-of-the-worlds-hardest-language-95a27c2cff3

            English is pretty simple. Learning to speak Ubykh or !Xóõ presents more of a challenge

            <- The Economist, 2016

            taf@bsd.networkT This user is from outside of this forum
            taf@bsd.networkT This user is from outside of this forum
            taf@bsd.network
            wrote last edited by
            #5

            @lproven Some research on how and when babies learn to speak has shown interesting results. All languages bar one has the same range of results.

            Danish is sufficiently hard to learn that even children of native speakers take longer to learn it properly than for any other language. The most likely cause is the bewildering array of almost identical vowel sounds.

            Link Preview Image
            Early vocabulary development in Danish and other languages: A CDI-based comparison | Journal of Child Language | Cambridge Core

            Early vocabulary development in Danish and other languages: A CDI-based comparison - Volume 35 Issue 3

            favicon

            Cambridge Core (www.cambridge.org)

            1 Reply Last reply
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            • lproven@social.vivaldi.netL lproven@social.vivaldi.net

              @jmax It really is. But it's just 2 skills: hearing the tones, & making the tones. (I am extremely poor at both.) And of course there is also the famously complex writing system.

              The language itself, its grammar and so on, is actually one of the simplest I've ever even learned a few sentences of.

              The thing is that it's an N-dimensional problem. The things that make 1 particular language hard are often unique to that language (or family thereof), and in other ways it may be extremely simple.

              At a basic level Japanese grammar is also very very simple. But counting is very complicated (there are no plurals, for a start, AIUI) & register (politeness, manners) are both very complex & very very important.

              (AIUI, the main thing that differentiates Malaysian & Indonesian is register.)

              Register is a big deal. It doesn't matter much in English. We even got rid of thee & thou & the associated verb forms.

              You need dozens of axes to define the bits that are difficult/easy.

              Some of the famous ones are only difficult in a few ways.

              The really tricky languages are tricky in _lots of different ways at once_.

              If Chinese is really hard in 2 ways, say (tones & script), then some are hard in 10 or 15 ways at once.

              There is a fascinating visualisation exercise in here somewhere.

              tschenkel@mathstodon.xyzT This user is from outside of this forum
              tschenkel@mathstodon.xyzT This user is from outside of this forum
              tschenkel@mathstodon.xyz
              wrote last edited by
              #6

              @lproven @jmax

              Just learning Chinese seriously, and I don't think Chinese is a particularly difficult language, aside from the two aspects @lproven mentioned (tones and writing system).

              But I would agree with one of my teachers, that Chinese is "longer" not "more difficult". Or, as another put it: "Most Chinese words are only one or two letters long. But you need to learn 3000 letters."

              In most other aspects, Chinese is surprisingly simple and really logical:

              - around 20 to 30 main grammar constructions (sentence forms like conditionals, etc.)
              - no conjugations or declinations
              - new, unknown words can often (not always) be worked out by the meaning of the characters
              - Chinese only has around 400ish syllables, which can come in 4 tones (plus the neutral tone), which makes it less than 2000 "sounds" one needs to be able to produce (compared to >15000 or so in English).

              The latter is also a difficulty because it means listening comprehension is extremely difficult, and while I can read (only around 400 characters so far, so a long way to go still) and speak, my listening comprehension is not yet up to the same level (one of the "long" language aspects).

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • lproven@social.vivaldi.netL lproven@social.vivaldi.net

                @jmax It really is. But it's just 2 skills: hearing the tones, & making the tones. (I am extremely poor at both.) And of course there is also the famously complex writing system.

                The language itself, its grammar and so on, is actually one of the simplest I've ever even learned a few sentences of.

                The thing is that it's an N-dimensional problem. The things that make 1 particular language hard are often unique to that language (or family thereof), and in other ways it may be extremely simple.

                At a basic level Japanese grammar is also very very simple. But counting is very complicated (there are no plurals, for a start, AIUI) & register (politeness, manners) are both very complex & very very important.

                (AIUI, the main thing that differentiates Malaysian & Indonesian is register.)

                Register is a big deal. It doesn't matter much in English. We even got rid of thee & thou & the associated verb forms.

                You need dozens of axes to define the bits that are difficult/easy.

                Some of the famous ones are only difficult in a few ways.

                The really tricky languages are tricky in _lots of different ways at once_.

                If Chinese is really hard in 2 ways, say (tones & script), then some are hard in 10 or 15 ways at once.

                There is a fascinating visualisation exercise in here somewhere.

                a_cubed@mastodon.socialA This user is from outside of this forum
                a_cubed@mastodon.socialA This user is from outside of this forum
                a_cubed@mastodon.social
                wrote last edited by
                #7

                @lproven @jmax
                Most of what you write about Japanese is correct at a basic level. It also depends on what language one is coming from. Japanese grammar is the reverse of English in many ways which makes it very hard for English speakers. You have to hold the whole sentence in your head before being able to think it in English.

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • lproven@social.vivaldi.netL lproven@social.vivaldi.net

                  @jmax It really is. But it's just 2 skills: hearing the tones, & making the tones. (I am extremely poor at both.) And of course there is also the famously complex writing system.

                  The language itself, its grammar and so on, is actually one of the simplest I've ever even learned a few sentences of.

                  The thing is that it's an N-dimensional problem. The things that make 1 particular language hard are often unique to that language (or family thereof), and in other ways it may be extremely simple.

                  At a basic level Japanese grammar is also very very simple. But counting is very complicated (there are no plurals, for a start, AIUI) & register (politeness, manners) are both very complex & very very important.

                  (AIUI, the main thing that differentiates Malaysian & Indonesian is register.)

                  Register is a big deal. It doesn't matter much in English. We even got rid of thee & thou & the associated verb forms.

                  You need dozens of axes to define the bits that are difficult/easy.

                  Some of the famous ones are only difficult in a few ways.

                  The really tricky languages are tricky in _lots of different ways at once_.

                  If Chinese is really hard in 2 ways, say (tones & script), then some are hard in 10 or 15 ways at once.

                  There is a fascinating visualisation exercise in here somewhere.

                  M This user is from outside of this forum
                  M This user is from outside of this forum
                  muddle@infosec.exchange
                  wrote last edited by
                  #8

                  @lproven @jmax Not sure that I'd rate counting in Japanese as being especially difficult. The idea of having different counter types for different things isn't too hard to adapt to. Most common things that you'd want to count either fall into largely-logical categories or just use the noun itself. It's also mostly regular, with the days of the month being the only fully irregular one (well, from 1-10 and 20; the rest are regular).

                  When you get past basic grammar, things do get quite tricky. There are tons of grammatical forms that use "koto" and "mono," for example, and keeping them all straight and distinct from each other takes a fair bit of effort.

                  Two things that are especially difficult for an English speaker are wa/ga and how the verbs for giving/receiving are so complicated, and made even more so by needing to use the right politeness level.

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