Somehow it seems that English is harder for people who speak only English, because I’ve never understood why people have issues with “your” vs “you’re” and I have no idea why differentiating between these words would be hard.
No_Entertainment6792 on
still is the easiest language
Wonderful-Hornet-164 on
Throughout his tough time teaching, Ted thought he had to be thorough though, in actually, he might as well have taught in a trough.
HubrisOfApollo on
y tho
mitox11 on
You can tell this was made by a person that only speaks english because homonyms exist in every language and they are not particularly hard in english
Dizzy_Vegetable7108 on
Learning new language is always hard, but English is one of the easiest to learn
DatVlad_ on
Forgot thot
TheArcanist_1 on
While English seems hard, it can be understood through tough thorough thought, though.
ux3l on
It’s still pretty easy
Theperfectool on
Be, being, been, all in a box cause they never stand alone
Good-Ad6650 on
Tell me the gender of a word Chair in Romanian if its a plural, does it at any point change, if so when?
bleep_boop_beep123 on
The ones who claim English as an “easy” language are the ones who speak it exclusively **yet** still struggle differentiating their homonyms and homophones.
And when they’re corrected, they get upset “yOu kNoW WhAT I’m tRYiNg tO SaY!”
Bamboopanda101 on
The hardest for me to this day is the difference between then and than and im too lazy to look it up lol
Fluid-Math9001 on
In old English, th in “that” and th in “thought” has their own letter, Thorn (Þ, þ) and Eth (Ð, ð) respectively. English ceased to use these letters because the typewriter that they import from France doesn’t have these letter, and they replaced it with th – y for Thorn in some cases, hence why you see “ye olde shop” and thou becomes you.
prolificimpregnator on
But it is easy, though 😂.
Clipzy22 on
It’s one of the hardest to master but it’s good for beginners learning new languages, assuming they already know an English adjacent language such as Spanish.
AxelVores on
The hardest part of English is all the weird verb tenses. I wish I wouldn’t have had to have learned those (I’m 60% sure that was a grammatically correct sentence)
27 Comments
Now make a sentence using all of those words.
There are only 2 homophones.
[removed]
I always have problems with brought and bought
Throughput
I read it clockwise starting with taught. Good choice comedically.
*Laughs in Russian or amy Slavic language*
Does anyone actually say English is easy though?
Uncomfortable.
Uncomfort? NO.
Discomfort.
Discomfortable? NO.
Somehow it seems that English is harder for people who speak only English, because I’ve never understood why people have issues with “your” vs “you’re” and I have no idea why differentiating between these words would be hard.
still is the easiest language
Throughout his tough time teaching, Ted thought he had to be thorough though, in actually, he might as well have taught in a trough.
y tho
You can tell this was made by a person that only speaks english because homonyms exist in every language and they are not particularly hard in english
Learning new language is always hard, but English is one of the easiest to learn
Forgot thot
While English seems hard, it can be understood through tough thorough thought, though.
It’s still pretty easy
Be, being, been, all in a box cause they never stand alone
Tell me the gender of a word Chair in Romanian if its a plural, does it at any point change, if so when?
The ones who claim English as an “easy” language are the ones who speak it exclusively **yet** still struggle differentiating their homonyms and homophones.
And when they’re corrected, they get upset “yOu kNoW WhAT I’m tRYiNg tO SaY!”
The hardest for me to this day is the difference between then and than and im too lazy to look it up lol
In old English, th in “that” and th in “thought” has their own letter, Thorn (Þ, þ) and Eth (Ð, ð) respectively. English ceased to use these letters because the typewriter that they import from France doesn’t have these letter, and they replaced it with th – y for Thorn in some cases, hence why you see “ye olde shop” and thou becomes you.
But it is easy, though 😂.
It’s one of the hardest to master but it’s good for beginners learning new languages, assuming they already know an English adjacent language such as Spanish.
The hardest part of English is all the weird verb tenses. I wish I wouldn’t have had to have learned those (I’m 60% sure that was a grammatically correct sentence)
I’m not sure people go around saying this.