1. You're cunt
2. What are the most popular foreign languages after English?
I guess it's french
Spanish, French and German
>>61564772
Over here it's German among men and French among women.
Or maybe I have a biased sample because most men I know are STEMfags like me anyways, and German is more appealing to STEMfags.
Japanese is the only one taught in both major universities aside from English though, weirdly enough.
>>61564738
Spanish, then French. Then probably Korean tbqfhwy
>>61564738
Swedish
>>61565177
>Korean
I thought weaboos outnumbered koreaboos.
>>61565279
German > French > Italian
Spanish
Probably french after english
>>61565732
What a shit language Spanish is.
I don't even know why they teach them in schools. completely useless if you don't aspire to work for some cartel. LatAmerica is a poor brown shithole, Spain is in decadence and irrelevant, chicanos are to be deported back to Mexico.
Useless language.
>>61564738
>after english
it's before english and it's kurdish :^)
spanish
I think it is Spanish. Used to be German a few years back.
Either Arabic or Russian
>>61564738
1. flag
2. spanish (basically italian for dummies)
Chinese >
French=Korean >
German=Spanish
1. France
2. Probably Arabic nowadays
Frenchman stabbed by couple shouting 'Allahu Akbar'
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-36682523
>>61565705
Isn't French tied with Italian in that graph? Why does it look wider and goes after Spanish?
>>61566176
Calmate ché.
>>61566667
This is extremely surprising. Are you sure?
>>61564908
Well, most private billingual schools over here teach on english and spanish, there's only one that teaches on french and spanish.
Most STEMfags I know do choose german, tho.
>>61567336
Most high schools in this cunt offer pupils the choice between French, German or Spanish courses as third languages. Spanish is the most preferred course for young people these days, and has been for a few years. The older generation is probably more familiar with German though.
But don't be fooled, no one in this country actually speaks "their" third language.
Kosovo
German. Most old folks speak serbo-croatian due to yugo education.
>>61564738
Spanish, by far.
>>61567101
Goddamn it.
I'm worried about the euro final m8.
>>61567472
That's almost the same for us, but we do have German bilingual school that everybody wants to get into (it's among the best in both academics and languges).
>>61567584
brb, making paperwork to teach Spanish in Norway.
German, followed by French
>>61564738
Spanish is the biggest language. French is the second most popular and the third biggest is German. Latin is what kids who don't want to take a language take. Chinese and Japanese are exclusively for richfags or weirdos.
>>61564738
French, Spanish and German (I think in that order).
A lot of schools now also teach Mandarin as well, but it's a bit of a meme language and children don't learn much in general.
>>61567963
It's funny how Mandarin is still a meme even though everyone and their mom is still pushing for it.
>>61567942
>Spanish
>foreign
:^)
French, then German.
>>61564738
>Arabic, Chinese, French, Russian, Spanish
It's troubling that English is the only popular White language.
>>61571894
There's no such thing as a white language, my friend. You seem a bit confused, because languages do not have colors.
Also, the official languages of the UN are just "the languages of the Security Council (i.e., winners of WWII) + the two most massive linguae francae not included)".
Notably missing are German, Italian, Portuguese, South/South East Asian languages with tons of speakers and Japanese.
Normal people learn other Romance languages: Spanish, French and Italian.
Tryhards learn German for the nazi memes.
Weebs learn Japanese.
Businessmen (try to) learn Chinese.
But really most people struggle too much with English (and heck, even Portuguese) to even bother going as far as a 3rd language.
>>61573007
>But really most people struggle too much with English
We have a joke over here that South Americans suck at learning English. Not that the general populace here is better, though.
>and heck, even Portuguese
Is this a meme? I've seen both Brazilian and Portuguese people, both here and elsewhere, saying that Portuguese is "extremely hard". I've studied some of the differences between Spanish and Portuguese and, aside from retardedly complex accentuation rules and less standardized phonetics, I don't see the difficulty jump (and I don't consider Spanish to be a difficult language).
>>61564908
>Over here it's German among men and French among women.
>>61567101
Memes aside, no, I think it is Spanish, then German or Italian
>>61571894
>English
>White language
>>61574651
People say portuguese is hard because sometimes we use the same world for two different things, its on the same level as those retards saying ENGLISH IS A HARD and then post something retarded and easy
>>61564738
They taught all sorts of languages in Primary School, Italian was the main one and some continued it in High School.
Then in High School there was a choice between French, Italian, Japanese and German
>>61574677
unless you're a grill you should be happy that women there long for the french D.
>>61574876
For france: You can choose between german and spanish after a certain grade with some school giving you other options. Most go for Spanish, i went for german due to some family being german swiss
>>61574677
Look at the bright side, girls here learn French because it sounds sexy, while nerds learn German because maybe it might help them make a buck (or because it sounds cool and edgy).
>>61574770
Yeah, countless morons always say English is hard because "spelling doesn't make sense", clearly not understanding what it is that makes languages hard.
>>61574790
lel
>>61574842
>Italian
That's pretty unique m8.
1. Switzerland
2. In the German speaking part of Switzerland it's French. Often 2 foreign languages are mandatory, and often it's English plus French. Usually we can't speak French well after school, maybe not at all (like me after more than 7 years of French).
>only >>61567009 mentioned either (both) Russian or Arabic seriously.
>only >>61567088 >>61567942 >>61573007 and >>61567963 mentioned Mandarin, and two of those mentioned it isn't actually being learned by the learners.
It's quite interesting how some of the UN official languages have almost no pulling factor, despite both of these languages being linguae francae for pretty large patches of clay and a bazillion speakers, while languages like Italian, Korean and Japanese are quite popular despite not being widespread at all and not having extremely large amounts of speakers.
Also, I think anyone can agree that German should probably be included.
maybe chinese