| | #1 (permalink) | |
| Suspended | No wonder English is such a hard language to learn. I found out English alphabetics and grammar were originated from Hebrew culture long time ago, then modified by Greek and Latin as time passed by. Why did they have to borrow stuffs from Hebrew in ancient world? No wonder English has such an idiotic grammar which I feel hard to learn and use. Also the words are combined in theyr means, that makes English vocabulary hard to memorzie. | |
| ||
| | #2 (permalink) | |
| Existing | Re: No wonder English is such a hard language to learn. English borrows a lot from many different languages. We borrow a lot of our more common words from German, and a lot of our less common words from Latin. However, because of the constant influence of many, many different cultures on english speaking people, from invasions of Britain, to colonial expansion, to the technological expansion today, English has become a melting pot of many different languages, with, if I'm not mistaken, many more words in it than most other languages. I believe (I'll confirm this later, if I can find it) that english has something like 2 million words, while French, for comparison, has around 600,000. ---------------- Hypography Forum Administrator | |
| ||
| | #3 (permalink) | ||
| Suspended | Re: No wonder English is such a hard language to learn. Quote:
| ||
| |||
| | #7 (permalink) | ||
| Resident Slayer | Re: No wonder English is such a hard language to learn. Quote:
Chauvinistically concerned, Buffy ---------------- "If you do not agree with anything I say, I'll not only retract it, but deny under oath that I ever said it!" __________________________________________________ ______________-- Tom Lehrer "The shrinks diagnosed me a sociopath with paranoid delusions. But they’re just out to get me cause I threatened to kill them." Forum Administrator Hypography Science Forums - Science for Boys and Girls! Its not for nothing that we hang out here. | ||
| |||
| | #9 (permalink) | ||
| Resident Slayer | Re: No wonder English is such a hard language to learn. Quote:
Faint praise, Buffy ---------------- "If you do not agree with anything I say, I'll not only retract it, but deny under oath that I ever said it!" __________________________________________________ ______________-- Tom Lehrer "The shrinks diagnosed me a sociopath with paranoid delusions. But they’re just out to get me cause I threatened to kill them." Forum Administrator Hypography Science Forums - Science for Boys and Girls! Its not for nothing that we hang out here. | ||
| |||
| | #10 (permalink) | |
| Exhausted Gondolier | Re: No wonder English is such a hard language to learn. Not all Jews are mean, I am quite against certain things myself but there are also positive things in Jewish culture. Just like in any ethinc group, there may be bad and good people. Please remember the rules concerning racism or derogatory posts. The same goes for other European alphabets as for the English. The Greek and Latin alphabets were derived from the Semitic alephbets, not so specifically from the Hebrew. Anyway that shouldn't make English more difficult to learn and grammer has nothing to do with the origin of the alphabet. The Semitic alephbets, including the Arabic, came in turn from use of a few of the Egyptian heiroglyphs to denote the initial consonantal sound of the corresponding word. The letter d was indicated with the heiroglyph for door, that began with the same d sound. Greek had much more need to indicate vowels and no need for some consonantal sounds such as 'h' or a glottal stop, so the Greek scribes used a few symbols for vowels. For instance 'a' is from the Greek alpha, in turn from the Semitic Aleph which originally indicated a glottal stop. In Arabic it is still a vertical line and derived from the heiroglyph for 'rejoice', hallel, which presumably didn't have the initial h sound but a glottal stop. The heiroglyph was a guy with arms straight up. The Semitic he became the Greek epsilon from whence the Latin e, but soon a letter h also crept into Latin writing. The Semitic vau originally represented the consonantal sounds of v and w as pronounced in English, the current name of the letter is something like "waw" in Arabic and "vav" in Persian, but it also gave birth to the vowels o and u, as well as being behind the history of the letter f. ---------------- Who's afraid of the Big Black Hole????? Go Black Hole! W the Black Hole! ![]() ![]() ![]() Hasta que el agujero negro nos traga, siempre! Hypography Forum PITA...... er, Administrator. Last edited by Qfwfq; 09-09-2005 at 03:13 AM. | |
| ||
![]() |
| Bookmarks |
| Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | |
| Thread Tools | |
| |
Similar Threads | ||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Is the English language difficult to learn ? | C1ay | Watercooler | 28 | 09-06-2005 05:35 AM |
| Unification of North America | alxian | Philosophy and Humanities | 32 | 09-02-2005 12:21 PM |
| "The World Atlas of Language Structures" Published | C1ay | General Science News | 1 | 08-08-2005 03:01 PM |
| Language Forum, do you want it? | sanctus | Suggestions and Wish List | 15 | 07-20-2005 07:42 AM |
All times are GMT -8. The time now is 10:42 PM.
















