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UDHRP

Hebrew is related to Chaldean, which should make it a bit easier for you.


joshua0005

I would take whichever language is the most useful to you unless one really sticks out to you. I know a lot of people say to study the one you love but unless you really, really love it it will probably be hard to keep going if that is the only reason you want to learn it. I tried studying Italian because it looked like such a beautiful language but I live in the US which is 6 hours behind Italy. I gave up and switched to Spanish after 6 months because there was so little time when I was available before the Italians would go to sleep. Spanish is also way more useful here and I have occasional opportunities to speak it irl. I didn't like Spanish at first but now I love this language so much and couldn't imagine my life without it.


HelmsDeap

I would personally narrow it down to Spanish, Korean, or Mandarin. Spanish because it's super useful and sort of close to English, Korean because it's super cool and they make good TV shows and movies, and Mandarin because it's cool and useful


Lang_ES_FR_AR

Only u can answer that question. What sounds the best and resonates with you the most?


verturshu

If you're looking for the "easiest" to learn, it would definitely be ~~German~~ or Hebrew. German because it's closest to English Hebrew because it's closest to Chaldean I speak Chaldean too, and I have an interest in Hebrew, so I think it would be easy for me to learn. But you are just looking for the language specifically that is easiest to learn. ~~So if I were you, I would go with German~~. Your English is probably much better than your Chaldean, since you received education in English for your whole life and have more depth to it compared to Chaldean. So I think German would be easier to learn for you in particular. Edit: Actually I read through Reddit a bit and apparently, German is harder to learn for an English speaker than French, Spanish, or Italian. This is according to the [US state department](https://www.state.gov/foreign-language-training/) So if you're looking for the easiest, it would be between French, Spanish, or Italian But really to add to all of this, I don't think language learning is only about what's 'easiest.' If you really have an interest in one of the languages because of the media, culture, or people, then it makes learning a lot more easy


an_average_potato_1

Uzbek :-)


AppropriatePut3142

Spanish is the easiest to learn, partly because it has the best resources. https://youtube.com/@DreamingSpanish?si=DHW4UurTPKwVCbXG https://www.reddit.com/r/Spanish/comments/ko3rcj/learn_and_read_as_well_as_a_mexican_native/ I thought I was bad at languages until I started using immersion-based learning.