lpetrich
Contributor
English is currently the biggest international language, and not surprisingly, the most-studied second language.
The most annoying things about the English language - Business Insider
Phrasal verbs are verb-preposition combinations, and are related to other West Germanic
Separable verbs, notably in Dutch and German.
I've found Wikibooks:Language Learning Difficulty for English Speakers - Wikibooks, open books for an open world -- how does English rate in difficulty for speakers of other languages? I've yet to find any list like this one for speakers of any other language.
The most annoying things about the English language - Business Insider
- English speakers say 'an hour and a half,' but not 'two hours and a half'
- Prepositions can prove difficult, like how we get 'on' a bus, but 'in' a car
- The level of formality can be unclear
- Then you have phrasal verbs, which can be 'mind-bending'
- 'Up' and 'down' can be combined with countless verbs, as one commenter illustrated beautifully
- And some words sound nothing like they're spelled
- Some English learners are thrown by regional accents and pronunciation
- Sometimes, English speakers from different countries don't even know how other dialects work
- English makes use out of words with very similar meanings, like skinny, thin, and slim
- In English, it's easy to turn nouns into verbs, like 'blanket' and 'book'
- And English's elaborate tense system can trip people up, too
- English has more vowel sounds than many other languages
- And some words are just plain hard to pronounce
I've found Wikibooks:Language Learning Difficulty for English Speakers - Wikibooks, open books for an open world -- how does English rate in difficulty for speakers of other languages? I've yet to find any list like this one for speakers of any other language.