Which language has least vocabulary?
Originally Answered: Which language has fewest words? Toki Pona , the world’s smallest language. While the Oxford English Dictionary contains a quarter of a million entries, and even Koko the gorilla communicates with over 1,000 gestures in American Sign Language, the total vocabulary of Toki Pona is a mere 123 words.
Which European language has the most words?
English
English is one of the most populous languages in terms of dictionary entries. The Oxford English contains over 200,000 words, with 171,476 active words and 47,156 inactive words. According to the dictionary Larousse, French has a vocabulary of 59,000 words. The dictionary Littré has 132,000 active words.
What is the most concise language?
The most succinct language is Mandarin Chinese, in traditional characters, followed by the same language in simplified characters. With little surprise, in the 10 most succinct languages, one has languages with one syllable per character (Chinese, Yi, Amharic, Korean) and Japanese (which is a very special system).
Which language has the simplest grammar?
Languages with Simple Grammar Rules
- 1) Esperanto. It is the widely-spoken artificial language in the world.
- 2) Mandarin Chinese. You did not see this one coming, right?
- 3) Malay.
- 4) Afrikaans.
- 5) French.
- 6) Haitian Creole.
- 7) Tagalog.
- 8) Spanish.
What is the hardest European language to learn?
But if you’re looking for a tougher linguistic challenge, try learning Hungarian. It will take you about 44 weeks (and around 1,100 hours) of instruction, as it’s considered a language “with significant linguistic and/or cultural differences from English.”
Which European language is easiest for English speakers?
Of these, Spanish and Italian are the easiest for native English speakers to learn, followed by Portuguese and finally French.
Which is the most perfect language?
Experts regard Sanskrit as the ‘most scientific human language ever’. Sanskrit is probably the only known language in the world boasting of a context free grammar, which makes sentence formation utterly precise, based on set rules.