English Is Easier Than German

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In that sense, English is ‘easier’ than other Germanic languages, and it’s because of those Vikings. Old English had the crazy genders we would expect of a good European language – but the Scandies didn’t bother with those, and so now we have none. Chalk up one of English’s weirdnesses.
Which is easier to learn German or English?
Which is easier to learn German or English?
But your question was about learning. English is also easier because there is plenty of great entertaining stuff (unterhaltendes Zeug) in English while a lot less in German. Every language is “easy” to learn if you have to or have the option of exposing yourself to it.
www.quora.com/Which-language-is-more-d…
“Historically, English is one of the Germanic languages, but, because of its insular evolution, it now bears little resemblance to the other Germanic languages such as German, Dutch, Norwegian, Swedish, and Danish. And while there is some overlap in French, the two grammars are very different.
www.amideast.org/blogs/english4success/a…
Is German language inferior to English?
Is German language inferior to English?
There is a significant difference between both languages. While German is mostly an original, “natural” language, modern English is a pidgin language or creole (google Middle English creole hypothesis). But that does in no way mean that English was somehow inferior, quite the contrary, it just has a different character.
www.quora.com/Which-language-is-more-d…
and a much easier grammar. But then again it's relative to what languages you already know. If you already knew Dutch or Frisian, for example, German would come quite easily. Still, Spanish is technically easier than German as according to: I am a native spanish speaker and have been studying german for 3 years, on and off.
www.quora.com/What-is-easier-to-learn-Sp…
https://www.quora.com/Which-language-is-more-difficult-to-learn-English-or-German
Перевести · English Grammar is easier than German Grammar. English is 50% of Grammar and 50% or vocabulary. Whereas …
https://www.italki.com/post/question-154920?hl=en
Перевести · I guess, English is much easier than German with all its complicated grammar (especially the system of cases and articles). The only thing that is easier in German is reading - you only have to learn some rules while in English there are more exeptions than …
https://www.linguee.com/english-german/translation/is+easier+than.html
Перевести · Many translated example sentences containing "is easier than" – German-English dictionary and search engine for German translations.
https://aeon.co/essays/why-is-english-so-weirdly-different-from-other-languages
Перевести · 13.11.2015 · In that sense, English is ‘easier’ than other Germanic languages, and it’s because of those Vikings. Old …
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https://www.amideast.org/blogs/english4success/august-22-2011-1621/english-easier...
Перевести · 22.08.2011 · Surprisingly, English is quite different from other languages emerging from Europe: “Historically, English is one of the Germanic languages, but, because of its insular evolution, it now bears little resemblance to the other Germanic languages such as German, …
https://languagesareeasy.com/why-german-is-easy-for-english-speakers-to-learn
Перевести · 1.German Has So Many Similar Word With English. German and English has surprisingly many similar words because they have same Germanic roots. I just realized it when I started to study German. Before I thought that only French and Spanish would be easier for English speakers. But nowadays I know that English is very close to German …
https://www.rypeapp.com/blog/is-german-easy-to-learn-for-english-speakers
Перевести · 18.04.2021 · Noun genders can be random. Unlike English, noun genders are often random in German. Since each noun can be masculine, feminine, or neutral, you have to memorize genders for each noun. OK, so we covered why German may be hard to learn. But we'd also argue that German is easy to learn for English …
https://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/nll/?p=31341
Перевести · German has a more complex grammar but a very consistent phonology and orthography, which in my opinion makes it structurally easier to learn than English. But then experience and mastery of one language perhaps helps set the stage for every other new one: I learned English and French effortlessly because I came at them from Italian and German.
https://www.thegermanprofessor.com/learning-german-is-easy
Перевести · 15.02.2016 · Because of compounding, the meanings of German words can be more readily predictable than their English counterparts. 8. English is a Germanic language. Speakers of English benefit from the fact that English and German …
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Which language is more difficult to learn: English or German?
László Arany, amateur language learning enthusiast
My native language is Hungarian, I speak both English and German. I think the best way to put arguments is to break it down to "inside the box" and "outside the box" considerations in determining how hard a language is.
I. Inside the box
What makes German harder (-) than English:
- genders of nouns,
- 4 cases that can modify the pronouns and add suffixes,
- plurals change for different words and are much more complicated,
- verb tenses are less logical and harder to use (for me),
- strict structures and fixed word order, which is hard to remember,
- long compound words made up of several other
My native language is Hungarian, I speak both English and German. I think the best way to put arguments is to break it down to "inside the box" and "outside the box" considerations in determining how hard a language is.
I. Inside the box
What makes German harder (-) than English:
- genders of nouns,
- 4 cases that can modify the pronouns and add suffixes,
- plurals change for different words and are much more complicated,
- verb tenses are less logical and harder to use (for me),
- strict structures and fixed word order, which is hard to remember,
- long compound words made up of several others,
- a lot of rules (this may be positive for some),
- less flexibility in "constructing" words and expressions.
What makes German easier (+) than English:
+ a lot of rules (this may be negative for some),
+ few exceptions to the rules, which is great,
+ the structures make you less likely to construct weird or easily misunderstood sentences.
II. Outside the box
If we start thinking outside the box then we soon realize that all the previous arguments mean little compared to other factors.
(1) What do you need to survive in your day-to-day life? If your TV speaks German, your shopkeepers are German, the traffic and other signs are German around you, then you will pick up German easier.
(2) What do you use for entertainment? If you watch Hollywood movies or British TV series, you play computer games in English, read books in English then English will stick to you much more than German.
(3) How your mother tongue relates to the target language (for me this didn't matter much, because Hungarian is not similar to any other language)?
(4) How much you enjoy the particular language? If you enjoy learning it and speaking it, you will learn fast.
(5) How many people are there with whom you can practice? You can find English speakers anywhere (online gaming, chat, comment sections, Quora, etc), while finding German natives and opportunity to speak to them in German may be more challenging.
Having said all that, I started with German at the age of 6 in primary school and it took me almost 12 years to get a C1 language exam at the end of high school. Meanwhile I started learning English by myself at the age of 11-12 because I wanted to understand the computer games I was playing, and I started learning the language formally in high school at the age of 14. I took my English language exam at the age of 16. Note that it took only 2 years of learning by myself and 2 years formal education to take the English exam, as opposed to 12 years formal education of German, due to the fact that I needed to use English for my hobby. Therefore I would say the "Outside-the-box" factors are much more important than the "Inside-the-box" factors. I did find German the hardest of the European languages I've meddled with (English, German, Spanish, Italian, French), although if you are interested in something really extremely hard on a whole new level, try Hungarian ;)
Related Questions (More Answers Below)
What makes German difficult to learn?
Which grammar is harder: French or German?
Is German really hard to learn for a native English speaker?
How hard is German pronunciation compared to English pronunciation?
Why is German a better language than English?
[Caveat: I am an amateur linguist. I have completed a considerable amount of coursework in English, German, and linguistics, and I have been working in Germany as a translator for about five years, but I do not claim to be any kind of official authority.]
Over the past few years, I have developed a theory that the experience of learners is manifested by the fact that German is (linguistically) a synthetic language and English an analytic one. English, because it lacks genders and the formal structures of German (cases, word order inversion, declensions, strong and weak endings) seems deceptivel
[Caveat: I am an amateur linguist. I have completed a considerable amount of coursework in English, German, and linguistics, and I have been working in Germany as a translator for about five years, but I do not claim to be any kind of official authority.]
Over the past few years, I have developed a theory that the experience of learners is manifested by the fact that German is (linguistically) a synthetic language and English an analytic one. English, because it lacks genders and the formal structures of German (cases, word order inversion, declensions, strong and weak endings) seems deceptively easy at the beginning: most learners can pick up the basic vocabulary fairly fast and can sound more proficient than they actually are. Moreover, since the grammatical structures of English depend primarily on word order rather than cases or endings, even when a student botches a spoken sentence, a native speaker can usually figure out what the student is trying to convey.
With German, this is not possible: you have to master the grammar to a large extent in order to make yourself intelligible. It is not true that “English has no grammar” or “English has simple grammar,” it’s just that the languages emphasize different aspects. As a result, German is devilishly hard at the beginning, but once you advance past a certain level, it becomes easier and easier, because the learner can simply plug all new or further knowledge into an existing structure. So one might say that the learning curve is very steep and daunting on the first day, but then levels out rapidly.
English, on the other hand, possesses an even more enormous vocabulary—coupled with excess reliance on a relatively small pool of basic words for everyday life, used in myriad ways. Try explaining the ins and outs of the word get to a German speaker, for example. English phrasal verbs are far more slippery and inconsistent than their counterparts, German’s trennbare Verben (separable verbs). The more a learner progresses, the worse, in some respects, the difficulty actually becomes: think of the learning curve as a initially gradual (easy) one that suddenly spikes abruptly upward, making the curve of true mastery seem as though it lies on an asymptotic line.
For this reason, many Germans who work in law, business, medicine, etc., regularly deceive themselves as to their English proficiency. They have learned English in school, and have perhaps taken some university courses in English, and besides that, many people love American and British music, so they are familiar with English. But this experience usually does not mean that they can communicate nuanced, complex subjects in it effectively. I routinely see English-language documents written by educated Germans. Most of them are wholly inadequate for the task at hand and do not convey the desired message or information.
What makes German difficult to learn?
Which grammar is harder: French or German?
Is German really hard to learn for a native English speaker?
How hard is German pronunciation compared to English pronunciation?
Why is German a better language than English?
Which language is easier to learn, English or German?
How hard is it to learn the German language, compared to English?
Which German language is easier to learn, other than English?
I'm 14 years old. I want to learn a language. Should I learn French or German?
Is German easy to learn if you already know English?
Which is the most difficult Germanic language?
Which language is difficult to learn if you are a non-native, English or German?
Do Germans mind if someone learning German makes a lot of mistakes while speaking to them?
Which language is easier to learn, German or French?
Which language is more useful to learn: French or German?
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