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is if I do keep this up and learn Spanish what is the best order, if there is one, in which to learn the other languages?

 
 
   

Question: I've always wanted to learn a new language and finally decided to start with Spanish. I'm using the Rosetta Stone Software and plan on getting Pimsleur cds to listen to in the car while driving. I'ts fun so far and as I look further ahead I can see me wanting to try my hand, mouth really, at a few of the other major languages in the world, Japanese, German, French, Arabic and so on. Possibly a pipe dream but I do like to dream big. :) My question is if I do keep this up and learn Spanish what is the best order, if there is one, in which to learn the other languages? I mean would learning German help with learning another language?

Answer: I think you might want to make sure you know what you're really interested in. Gaining a level of fluency in any of those languages is a matter of years of study or living abroad - I had a similar plan at one point, and here I am with 4 years of Arabic and an imminent trip to Jordan, but hardly anything I would call "fluency". But I do think that once I gain fluency in Arabic, Hebrew will probably be much easier just from having cognates and a similar structure. Similarly, if you already are very familiar with Spanish, French will be much easier, while it won't help quite as much with German(or so I've heard). As for Japanese and Arabic, the order of those isn't going to matter, since you're not planning on studying any related langauges(granted, french can be vaugly useful for the small number of loanwords in Arabic)

However, my strongest advice(if you're interested in fluency) is to just study one language that really fascinates you- learning a language is a long, hard process, so you might as well do the most interesting one you can, because you're gonna be stuck with it for a while. If you want to learn a lot of different languages, choose ones with large language groups(like the Romance languages) that are still pretty close, or that have similar "features"(Like if you want to learn a bunch of tone languages, learning any tone language will make it easier to learn others. Presumably similar advice would follow for click languages, but I don't think Pimsleur's Xhosa tutor is out yet)

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