What is the most spoken language in Europe?

What is the most spoken language in Europe?

English

Which languages are Indo-European?

Indo-European languages

  • Albanian.
  • Anatolian †
  • Armenian.
  • Balto-Slavic (Baltic and Slavic languages)
  • Celtic.
  • Cimmerian †
  • Dacian †
  • Germanic.

How many European languages are there?

There are 24 official languages in Europe… but there are actually more than 200 languages spoken on the continent. Furthermore, language is an extension of identity.

Which language is most difficult to write?

Mandarin Chinese Interestingly, the hardest language to learn is also the most widely spoken native language in the world. Mandarin Chinese is challenging for a number of reasons. First and foremost, the writing system is extremely difficult for English speakers (and anyone else) accustomed to the Latin alphabet.

How difficult is Tamil?

Tamil is definitely not easy, but it’s not too difficult either. It’s an agglutinative language, so learning to form sentences can be a big pain. Tamil is a diglossic language, so the written and spoken forms are different. Most Tamil learning books and websites that I have seen teach the written form.

How many days will it take to learn Tamil?

15 – 30 days

Can malayalis understand Tamil?

Yes. 75% of Malayalis can understand Tamil and and more than 50% of them can speak Tamil. Because Malayalam language has a rich influence of Tamil and Sanskrit.

Is Tamil difficult for English speakers?

I would say it is considerably difficult for an English speaker. Tamil is from an entirely unrelated family, its grammar is very different, it has very little vocabulary in common, it has a different writing system and worst of all it has a high degree of diglossia.

What is the most beautiful language in India?

Bengali India

What is worse than the F word?

Um, the “C” word is considered much worse than the “F” word in the United States, so there’s that…..

Who decided curse words bad?

George Carlin

Is Fiddlesticks a bad word?

As fiddlesticks is not regarded as profane, it is sometimes used as a substitute for a profanity as in “Fiddlesticks! I’ve left my wallet at home“. Rarely heard these days, it was used far more widely 30 to 40 years ago by Brits who preferred to avoid using rude words.

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