Check out these other benefits to learning a new language 👉🏼 kzitem.info/news/bejne/z6as02hje2eVZII
@PurpleDrac
5 ай бұрын
That is so cool you got Portuguese as a number one favorite! I never would've taken you for a Portuguese speaker never would've guessed but man it's such a strong language much like it's older sibling, Spanish. But despite their similarities I always viewed them as their own separate nation and not solely for their indifference to Spain but as an independent. Just a remarkable language absolutely love hearing it when it's spoken. Lots of forums on quora cover the language. Lots of people talk about it want to know it and so forth. Just so inspiring to see this video thanks 🙋🏽♂️for sharing! 😎
@vendingservices8900
5 ай бұрын
No Spanish? It’s definitely the most important language to learn in the United States! Since I started learning it, I’ve found new people to speak it with almost every day.
@favOriTe-v6e
5 ай бұрын
that's too obvious
@C_In_Outlaw3817
5 ай бұрын
@@favOriTe-v6e Yea I mean it is obvious for Americans you’re right. They love Spanish speakers in healthcare
@ThePraQNome
5 ай бұрын
Billions of people already speak Spanish and/or English, so there's no point of mentioning those languages. Strategically, languages like Portuguese, Italian, German and Dutch are more valuable to have in your resume.
@coolbrotherf127
5 ай бұрын
Everyone already knows about Spanish
@Sonicstillpoint83
5 ай бұрын
You’re confusing something that will allow you to speak to numerically more people with something that has résumé utility, and therefore will increase your pay. Because there are so many native speakers coming to the United States, there’s no reason that an employer who needed it would choose someone who has been trying to learn a language for a year over someone, who just moved here and speaks it as their native language. Spanish is 100% useless vocationally in the United States. I minored in Spanish 20 years ago and it doesn’t peak anyone’s interest as much as my German major because it’s just not as common. German has never been absolutely necessary, but the International German speakers always smile and appreciated, even though they all can speak English. If you want to enjoy Spanish, cultural content, then you should really learn Portuguese, because Portuguese speakers can understand Spanish, but not the other way around. Once you know, Portuguese, I’ve been told that there is a three step process to convert your Portuguese to intelligible Spanish, which I’d like to figure out someday for fun. Stretching your brain with any foreign language is better than nothing, so find something that makes you feel excited rather than something you hope will give you a Pay bump down the road. Find a way to seamlessly use any language in your everyday life in a way that she wouldn’t consider studying. In the early 2000s, I changed my voicemail box to Spanish and then used the German installer for computer programs that I already knew how to use so that I would passively be exposed to the language as I did things. MySpace and Facebook both had interface settings that would allow you to change the language. Even though the Internet isn’t really coded like that anymore, you could still try looking around specific site settings.
@floridapathfinder4252
5 ай бұрын
Spanish is an essential in America. Especially in healthcare. So many entry level medical jobs have a huge Latin population.
@thato596
5 ай бұрын
You will do fine with english in america
@noelforde237
5 ай бұрын
Not for too long 😂@@thato596
@vortix8671
5 ай бұрын
That is my top-8 languages list to boost your resume -Javascript -Python -Java -C# -PHP -C/C++ -Ruby -GO
@Hell_nahiris
5 ай бұрын
Needs more liked
@gesm392
5 ай бұрын
Chatgpt will replace it
@andybliss5965
5 ай бұрын
@@gesm392 not nearly as much as it will replace human translators to be fair.
@pierreabbat6157
5 ай бұрын
The languages I decided to learn a few years ago are Rust, Haskell, and Julia, all of which, unlike some of those, are compiled to machine code. I write GUI programs in C++ and write the UI in English and Spanish.
@derpauleglot9772
5 ай бұрын
@andybliss5965 According to a quick Google search, 3 billion people speak more than one language and there are only 600k translators, the question is how AI will affect learning and using languages for the 99% of people who aren't translators. Ai is rapidly getting better at coding (Devin, AlphaCode2) so even coding might not be as future-proof as many people think. Combining a variety of skills might work best. Like becoming a dog trainer who can teach commands in 20 languages and uses prompt engineering, content creation and e-commerce skills to find clients and sell products.
@jeungbou
5 ай бұрын
This is actually quite a legit list. It is not your typical learn the language with the most speakers type of recommendation which are cluttering the internet.
@alpo2smith
5 ай бұрын
Olly , you’re so right. Learning languages is definitely an eye opener. I practice 30-60 minutes daily on many Western European languages. It’s so much fun plus when I travel there the connections one makes with locals is so much more authentic. In May I will be riding my bicycle in the Netherlands, Belgium, France and Germany. So excited to be able to practice the languages there.
@PetraStaal
5 ай бұрын
Be prepared to get responses in English as soon as a Dutchie hears your accent.
@alpo2smith
5 ай бұрын
@@PetraStaal Lol, met many touring around my city-Vancouver. You’re probably right. Nice to attempt it when I can. It displays respect for the culture of others. My thoughts anyway.
@leonardowynnwidodo9704
5 ай бұрын
I’m from Indonesia, but I spoke English more fluently as a kid than I was in my mother tongue; I can speak it now but people point out that I sound stiff or like a foreigner😅 I began studying in the Netherlands back in 2020, during corona times which means most lectures and practicals were online, and in my spare time I began learning Dutch, since it’s the language of our colonizers and that most of the vocabulary in the Indonesian language is Dutch-based (e.g. “kamar” from “kamer”, “kulkas” from “koelkast”, “pensiun” from “pensioen”, etc. ); I’m also learning German and French afterwards cause I’m planning on a road trip after my studies. I never knew learning Dutch could be so helpful, since I initially believed Dutch is commonly spoken in the Netherlands and Flanders in Belgium, and that it could open up job markets in countries where it’s not commonly spoken. You really open my eyes to a world of possibilities. P.S. at 10:24 he mentioned how Dutch is also spoken in Asia, and I immediately thought of Indonesia, which is funny because even though we were under Dutch colonial rule for 350 years we don’t even speak the language.
@ErtixPoke
5 ай бұрын
What language do you prefer to learn: German or French? And did you think about languages such as Spanish and Italian?
@leonardowynnwidodo9704
5 ай бұрын
@@ErtixPoke IMO I would say French because I’ve never been to Wallonia, which is the French-speaking southern half of Belgium, and that my father is planning to go to Switzerland, particularly the west close to France. As for the other languages, I’ll give a shot to, say Spanish, Japanese, Hungarian, etc. Thank you for your comment
@ErtixPoke
5 ай бұрын
@@leonardowynnwidodo9704 No problem. :) But why don't German? German speaking countries are safer to live than France and are a better economies.
@leonardowynnwidodo9704
5 ай бұрын
@@ErtixPoke I agree; Germany is better, but I kinda like French for how romantic they sound 😅😅
@RemyZombie
5 ай бұрын
I'm Brazilian, I'm a native portuguese speaker and learning Spanish and English.
@filipecalado5773
5 ай бұрын
and eu to leaning inglês and finnish in the mesmo tempo! Perkele! ei taas! Misturei all! ashuahsuahushauhsuh
@autokafer4031
5 ай бұрын
@WetcrispsYTп#здишь!
@oprimata8970
5 ай бұрын
@WetcrispsYT ta bom ta bem demais
@ГерманШаповал-ь9и
5 ай бұрын
@WetcrispsYTpretty cool, and i understood 3 languages)
@Br4nd0nS4n7os1995
5 ай бұрын
Qué curioso, yo soy nativo del Español y estoy aprendiendo Portugués de Brazil e Inglés.❤
@reynard2ki
5 ай бұрын
I have a degree in Political Science and French. FYI, I'm American living in the Detroit area. near a lot of the auto companies and suppliers. My French got me to where I am today. Out of university I worked in tech support (I have strong computer skills), then on to some programming, then to global director of Quality Assurance. I would not be where I am today without having learned French.
@samvel8381
5 ай бұрын
I'm considering learning one of those Spanish( maybe Portuguese), French or German, but can't choose which will give me benefit the most. After your comment ,perhaps, it's French...
@ErtixPoke
5 ай бұрын
@@samvel8381So, what did you choose?
@chrisbunka
5 ай бұрын
If you’re in the US, you can definitely use Japanese and German in the Detroit area because of automotive and Arabic because of Dearborn, the HQ of Ford.
@jmwild22
5 ай бұрын
That's interesting
@ErtixPoke
5 ай бұрын
Why these? What's with Spanish/Italian/Mandarin?
@dknapp64
5 ай бұрын
Great video Olly! I lived and worked in Brazil for 3 years and it was one of the best decisions I've ever made! Brazil is a huge market and they do lots of agricultural research too! They are one of the largest producers of soy in the world!
@ErtixPoke
5 ай бұрын
Unfortunately, Brazil isn't a safe place to live in. 😞
@daptydeduck3998
5 ай бұрын
In Afrikaans we also say Lekker a lot, its very cool hearing Dutch, sounds like a fancier version of Afrikaans, seeing Afrikaans came from Dutch
@rashidah9307
5 ай бұрын
Yeah, I thought of Afrikaans, too, when they talked about lekker! I lived in South Africa for a year and I heard that word a lot, even mixed in with English.
@mmaxine1331
5 ай бұрын
@@rashidah9307 My boyfriend’s from SA and teaching English here in China since I learned to speak German I thought he was saying lecker, and we play Video games a lot he would also use the word Speel which sounded like Spiel
@marikothecheetah9342
5 ай бұрын
Go Quebec! I fully support their decision to go French full throttle. I am lucky to work for company where I can use foreign languages. My main languages are English and German but I also brush up on my French. Also, I lived in Germany for two years and I can confirm that yes - doctors and other people will speak to you in German, no mater how good Germans speak English. I am surprised with Japanese, though. I am learning it more intensively lately and I hope to do my JLPT art last. I know that the highest level is like junior high, but still.
@nsevv
5 ай бұрын
Try some French books (by Brian Smith and France Dubin and Vincent Serrano Guerra) with audio books and free resources apps online.
@StephenVenablesMusic
5 ай бұрын
It’s also good to remember that there are also opportunities aside from working for large companies, although as a Mandarin learner the Great Firewall has presented a formidable challenge for me. I released a Chinese-lyric album last year and went to China to promote it. Because KZitem is forbidden in China, the outreach to fans in mainland China has no ripple effect in the West and I had to learn which apps people use to listen to music there, which genre is more associated with what platform, where younger people go to find content vs. older generations, etc. In the end, it’s all a grand adventure. After all, the “roadblocks” provide unceasing opportunities to seek answers and otherwise engage with native speakers about important topics, which is what we all need to continue improving. Rock on everyone! 🤘
@erntefreude
5 ай бұрын
When I had to learn German (my boyfriend was german and his english skills were lousy), I actually thought the grammar would be harder than it actually is. The trick really is, as Olly did say, to find German friends. Most everyone under 30 years old can speak english, as it is taught in grade school, starting in the 5th grade. These friends can be helpful in hearing the german grammar, by just listening to their conversation. I went also to adult education, in the evening which have "german for native english speakers" classes offered by the Goethe Institute, and afterwards, one may apply to university. I really enjoyed learning to roll my "R's" and make that gutteral, "CH" (as in Bach). And lastly, most all germans are kind to native english speakers trying to learn the language. Germany is a gorgeous land and it has the best bread and beer in the world, no exaggeration. As the germans say, "Man kann sein Brot essen oder trinken." This translates to, "One can eat or drink one's bread". This is a joke, referring to how beer is basic to german life. And both have very similar ingredients.
@FeliciaFollum
5 ай бұрын
Oh my!!! Portuguese is my strongest and Hindi second. I'm currently learning Italian. But my dream job as a kid was teaching snowboarding.... And I'm a bit obsessed with Japanese ground tricks... Hmmm
@antoinesubitlescoups338
5 ай бұрын
Impressive!
@michaelanders6161
5 ай бұрын
Olly, great video! American, here. German is my only fluent language other than my native 'Murikan, 😏. I have had just some basic courses in Spanish and French, with a sprinkle of exposure to continental Portuguese and to Dutch. I was very intrigued by what you said about Dutch, because as a speaker of both English and German, Dutch completes the western Germanic trio, as far as major lanuages. The Hindi bit about having to learn to distinguish 4 different "D" and 4 different "T" sounds genuinely intimidated me away from trying to learn some Hindi, but it has to be interesting linquistically to study the Indo-European linguistic connections. I find my language-learning motivation perpetually split between diving ever deeper into German vs trying to improve my Spanish basic comprehension. I get why Spanish did not make this specific list, but for Americans, it may not be the most profitable, but IS the most utilitarian. And it is simply beautiful. Arguably the most musical of languages.
@mmaxine1331
5 ай бұрын
I found German incredibly soothing when spoken well, Spanish is just too nasal sounding, Greek to me sounds more lyrical to me, and my native tough Chinese is just downright awful
@thatcasualdragon2975
4 ай бұрын
Just because it popped up when you were talking about job listings for Dutch speakers, Pennsylvania Dutch is actually an old German dialect (the Dutch is from Deutsch) spoken primarily by the Amish. Obviously, there are strong connections between German and Dutch, but actually either of those is only going to get you so far with Pennsylvania Dutch.
@abanobzaytoun9709
Ай бұрын
im currently learning german and portuguese, also i speak english and arabic, and some french!
@Andreas-ns7tt
4 ай бұрын
Where's Mandarin with 1.3B speakers?
@kyledarrow1809
2 ай бұрын
The point is just that I think mate
@samishi9785
Ай бұрын
tbf china makes up like 1.1 billion of that. maybe he meant something more diverse or is spread out
@NeichoKijimura
5 ай бұрын
I got an ad in my native tongue Dutch and was so happy at first that you were to cover my language, I then realised what it was and got sad again. But fuck yeah, I got baited but it's reeeaaaal!
@beyblader74
5 ай бұрын
Can you make a "Daily Study Routine" video for language learners?
@MarkRoy-e2b
5 ай бұрын
About 10 years ago, I heard an interview on American public radio. A representative of a Latin American corporation said that when they recruited bilingual workers in Miami, many of the American 'Hispanic' applicants who claimed to speak Spanish actually spoke a jumble of street Spanish/slang that was totally inappropriate for business communication. They'd be far better off with Anglo-Americans who had taken Spanish in school than with second generation Cuban-Americans of Puerto Ricans who heard the language at home but never properly learned formal Spanish.
@jw-ws8dz
5 ай бұрын
Americans who take Spanish in school barely know how to form a sentence lol
@huguesdepayens807
5 ай бұрын
@@jw-ws8dzI knew how to form many sentences after a year of highschool spanish
@guang-wen
5 ай бұрын
Language domains are very important to consider! What you say is true; many children of immigrants who don’t receive a formal education in their mother tongue do not possess the necessary abilities to navigate many situations like working in the language, dealing with legal/government documents, even high level translation or interpretation despite being a native speaker.
@pierreabbat6157
5 ай бұрын
Spanish is my third native language; I was a childhood overhearer but now speak fairly fluently. Most people at the church I attend are immigrants. Yesterday at church, there was an activity where we read a Bible verse and wrote things. The guy in my group who wrote spelled a lot of words wrong, like "an" for "han" and "Bien Benidos" for "Bienvenidos", and I ended up correcting his spelling. I've met first-language Spanish speakers who didn't know the words for "leek", "marshmallow" (the lesson mentioned the marshmallow experiment, and I explained afterward that "malvavisco" is not "malva visco" (two unrelated families) but "malva hibisco" (same family, and so is cotton)), or "apricot" (and he worked with apricots at a store).
@rashidah9307
5 ай бұрын
@@jw-ws8dz I think you're missing the point! Lol. Those non-Hispanic Americans who take their Spanish studies seriously, get good teachers (or language exchange partners), and develop good learning habits can be quite successful.
@filipecalado5773
5 ай бұрын
if you need a portuguese lessions, talk to me to exchange languages! I need the one with pacience for my english learning skills!
@fukpoeslaw3613
5 ай бұрын
Sorry, I'm not anglophone, I'm Dutch. Only thing I can do for you is saying it's lessons, not lessions. Good luck anyways.
@filipecalado5773
5 ай бұрын
@@fukpoeslaw3613 I finished watching the video, and I'm thinking about learning Dutch too! Here near Brazil there are countries that speak this language, and it would be interesting to learn!
@mikidias
5 ай бұрын
What??? 😮 Dude, you don't speak my language!! You speak but Brazilian 🇧🇷 Lmao 😂 🤣 Get out of here 😡 Who you're trying to fool??? Come on! Ufff La Hawllah la Qouwattah Illah billah.... 😑 🤦🏼♀️
@darthhydralisk
5 ай бұрын
Quite funny to see 3 languages that I learn as the top in demand. I am learning German and French at the moment on an intensive language and Italian on a slower pace at the moment until I reach a better level with French as that for me is a new language. Even if it's latin language, the pronunciation is not really that easy. German for me was easier to pick up because I did some in School.
@ErtixPoke
5 ай бұрын
At school. *
@sidharth1123
5 ай бұрын
As a French and Hindi speaker looking to learn another after I become fluent in the first, I'm surprised that Spanish isn't on here. I'd read the Economist report about German but I know that Spanish will be easier. Which do you suggest between the two Olly?
@jmwild22
5 ай бұрын
I think Spanish was just too obvious.
@nHans
5 ай бұрын
Try Gujarati. It's easy for Hindi speakers to learn. And Gujarat is one of the richest states in India-and, for obvious reasons, will keep getting richer. If you didn't like that suggestion, I have another twenty or so ideas that might interest you.
@socosoul8294
5 ай бұрын
I think it depends in what field you are in or where you are planning to go
@sidharth1123
5 ай бұрын
@@socosoul8294 Tech writer looking to move to Canada.
@mikidias
5 ай бұрын
I'm exactly the opposite way around..... 😂 I'm myself European Latina, Portuguese native citizen and I can't wait to see myself out of here 😅 😅 I've learned myself about 4️⃣ foreign languages during college and university time, but, most recently (latest few years....) I ruched and ran - out myself into Arabic (Saudi w Khalliji dialect), because my goal is actually to move - out from here to middle - East Khallijiya, to be honest, especially into Saudi w Yemen 🇸🇦 🇾🇪 Now, my goal is to improve my Arabic since I'm not fluent yet, but, hopefully, I'll get and become fluent in it and in the future I plan to learn other language, the language of the Holy Scriptures - Aramaic 📖 InshAllah!!! 🙏🏻 😇
@days_hadd
5 ай бұрын
Arabic is a tricky one tho... the dialects can be so vastly different from one another... You can always learn Modern Standard Arabic and you can be understood everywhere and read newspapers and such but... nobody speaks like that on a day to day basis... learning fus-haa (standard arabic) and levantine arabic has almost been like learning two different languages honestly... had to put fus-haa on the back burner for awhile as I became more fluent in levantine arabic.
@corinna007
5 ай бұрын
Still hoping you'll make a deep video about Finnish. 😅 But anyway; I've been learning German on and off since I was a teenager. Maybe someday I'll tackle Dutch too, since my heritage language is a mix of German and Dutch.
@JapanLover-bm4yp
5 ай бұрын
As someone who is learning French and Japanese although Japanese a bit more seriously, I take this as a win for my opportunities. Also I know quite a bit of Russian since I'm Russian and hear it everyday, although I don't speak it, I plan on furthering my knowledge in it later
@veritasardens6547
5 ай бұрын
@storylearning, I am from India and I speak most of these languages (and some not listed here) except Hindi, Arabic and Japanese. Yes, you heard that right, not all in India speak Hindi, those who speak Hindi are mostly in the North, North East and Central parts of India whereas the vast majority of Southerners do not speak it especially people like myself from Tamil Nadu. We have our own ancient language Tamil here and to communicate with people from other parts of India we either use English or with the more difficult ones who speak on Hindi, either they learn to speak to us in Tamil or we can get by with broken Hindi, lol. It is easier to find more English speakers here in South India, even in Bangalore than in the North.
@inspiredartz2454
2 ай бұрын
I love your videos please keep it up! I love when you do interview style videos.
@thefallenone6279
5 ай бұрын
what about Mandarin Chinese...!!!??
@ritasallai152
5 ай бұрын
A friend got a job in Switzerland, he is leaving in a week. I am really wishing him luck, and hoping he finds the place great. We had his leaving party yesterday, he got a handmade mug ( big tea fan) with our towns best known spots. Hope it will be a conversation starter at work, but maybe he will run into fellow hungarians.
@Cyclonus2377
5 ай бұрын
I'm a bit surprised Russian isn't on the list. Or any other Eastern European languages. As many immigrants come from that part of the world. Not to mention as much business as we conduct with a lot of those countries. Maybe not Russia so much, for obvious reasons. But with countries like Ukraine or Poland, for example.
@nsevv
5 ай бұрын
Most russian speak english. it is a difficult language, not really worth learning it doesn't add any economic value to your life.
@ГерманШаповал-ь9и
5 ай бұрын
@@nsevvalmost nobody in russia speaks english
@ElymasMagus0
2 ай бұрын
I have to ask Please someone should answer Why is there no spanish ?? I am currently learning Spanish so i just felt a bit bad
@nilsschneider2006
5 ай бұрын
11:07 You know that Pennsylvania Dutch is actually Pennsylvania German and has nothing to do with Dutch? (The job offer on the right side)
@Axitutl60
5 ай бұрын
Two languages I'm surprised not to see in the list are Mandarin Chinese and Spanish, the largest and second largest languages in the world in terms of numbers of speakers. China is the rising power in Asia, and the world's second largest economy, I think Chinese would be more valuable than Japanese to learn if you want to learn an Asian language. Spanish is spoken in lots of countries in South and Central America as well as by millions of people in the USA and in Spain itself. Dutch? Not spoken much outside Holland and Belgium, probably not much use unless you are specifically interested in living and working in one of those small countries.
@jeungbou
5 ай бұрын
It is about boosting your resume. Spanish and Chinese are both languages where companies can easily get native speakers. And the business environment in China is very “unique” and very limited to the manufacturing sector, so if foreign companies want to do business with China they normally rely on people born there who can navigate the system. By the way I speak both Chinese (including some Cantonese) and Japanese fluently, but working in Japan was definitely the better choice when it comes to opportunities and salary.
@jmwild22
5 ай бұрын
Did you watch the video?
@nsevv
5 ай бұрын
Did you even watch the video??
@thato596
5 ай бұрын
you mean mandarin
@lukealexander4512
5 ай бұрын
Great video. Are there language jobs where you can make six figures early on or within a reasonable timeframe? It’s not all about the money, but even my software engineering friends can’t afford a house in Jacksonville, Florida. As such, I am a Computer Science/Data Science major. The city has a large Slavic population.
@PhysiologybyHeart
5 ай бұрын
I love your content but please add subtitles, I can't understand your accent most of the time :( ( auto generation is not working well since it's script continues words by words which is impossible to follow)
@excancerpoik
5 ай бұрын
the biggest reason to learn hindi is that devanagri looks cool
@jmwild22
5 ай бұрын
it totally looks cool and is cool
@kkkrauze
5 ай бұрын
after a short period of time it really won't matter anymore
@PlainPortuguese
5 ай бұрын
Excellent video, Olly! I completely agree that learning Portuguese can open many doors, especially for those looking for opportunities in business, tourism or scientific research. As you mentioned, Portuguese is a dynamic and increasingly important language on the global stage. Congratulations on the content and thank you for promoting linguistic diversity. #plainportuguese
@favOriTe-v6e
5 ай бұрын
I'm always surprised when I see portuguese on these lists because I never thought it would be a comercially important language lol
@MaoRatto
5 ай бұрын
Two reasons why. It's so close to Spanish that it makes it worth learning Portuguese, but also by learning the spoken form. You can comprehend Spanish's words, but not speak it.
@ThePraQNome
5 ай бұрын
@@MaoRatto Nope. The reason is because Brazil is the largest economy in South America and there are many job opportunities. Also, Brazil has a good relationship with pretty much every country in the world, which help with business. Also Portugal is an strategically country in Europe. Not to mention the Portuguese speaking countries in Africa and Asia. It has nothing to do with the similarities with Spanish. Spanish is just like English, there are already so many speakers of those languages. It's best to have languages like Portuguese, Dutch or German in your resume because they're less common than Spanish.
@ErtixPoke
5 ай бұрын
@@ThePraQNomeAnd what would you say about French/Italian/Mandarin? The situation in America may look different to the situation in Europe.
@ProMasterH
5 ай бұрын
Hi olly could you make a video about short stories in spanish for beginners volume 2 I would really like to know more about it thanks
@honslo9263
Ай бұрын
Come on, if you don't live in the Netherlands, Belgium, or Suriname, all Chinese, Russian, and Spanish are objectively far more important than Dutch.
@rvds5003
Ай бұрын
No, this is about supply and demand. People who speak Dutch are much more difficult to find. For the languages you mention, companies will easily be able to get a native speaker especially considering the fact that the youth unemployment rates in China, Russia and most if not all Spanish speaking countries are much higher than in The Netherlands and Flanders.
@aleksandrshapovalenko4263
5 ай бұрын
Billion speakers of French in 2065? Sounds like BS, sorry. The fact that French is the official language of many African countries doesn't mean that all population of those countries is fluent in French.
@noelleggett5368
5 ай бұрын
Like English, French has a lot of second-language speakers (like me). But I think the total population of French language speakers in 2024 is close to half a billion (But the young woman in the video was referring to an estimated Francophone population of a billion in 2065 - 41 years from now). The number of speakers of French as a first language is around 80 million. The language (other than English) that I used most working in Sydney, Australia, was French. (In Sydney, I also found Cantonese, Mandarin, Indonesian, Italian, Vietnamese, Hindi, Levantine Arabic, German, Japanese, Portuguese and Irish useful.)
@aleksandrshapovalenko4263
5 ай бұрын
@noelleggett5368 Well, according to official report of Organisation internationale de la Francophonie (2022) the total number of French speakers in the world is 321 million. With such small (relatively) base of native speakers (80 millions or so) and not the best educational conditions for acquiring good level of French in most former colonies of Africa I really doubt that the number of French speakers will rise so fast. Of course I'm not an expert.
@option7
5 ай бұрын
Also worth mentioning that a few African countries have dropped French as a priority language such as Rwanda and Mali.
@thato596
5 ай бұрын
I have seen french speakers and media in france saying that. That is french propaganda. They trying to promote their language with lies
@shadyboy-c3k
5 ай бұрын
My wife is malaysian and she lives right beside the portuguese enclave in melaka, many there speak cristao an old form of portguese
@julkongkamerakate9985
5 ай бұрын
Can i ask where is Chinese?
@patax144
5 ай бұрын
3 out of 6, but with German and English Dutch shouldn't be that hard and might retake Japanese
@joshuawallwork6678
26 күн бұрын
Can alguna personne understand 我?我am hablando espagnol, 法语,french, et inglés. Say je entiendo in 中文 if c'est así
@nasirakhanam
5 ай бұрын
Hindi? Its actually Urdu they are speaking. Even this vlogger is speaking urdu. Real Hindi is very hard .
@luciaherrerafuente9048
5 ай бұрын
My problem with learning portuguese is that, being spanish myself, I can easily get by in Portugal without actually knowing the language. I can read anything (fiction books included) no problem, I can understan and make myself understood quite easily... Like everything that motivates me to learn a language I can already do decently enough. Same problem with italian.
@mikidias
5 ай бұрын
Then..... That's NOT a problem!!! 😑 🤦🏼♀️ Try to actually be a REAL NATIVE Portuguese like ME MYSELF and try another TOTALLY DIFFERENT language like me, I'm doing by learning my 5️⃣ language - Arabic 🇸🇦, and only Then you can complain on!...... Lol 😑 😂
@andybliss5965
5 ай бұрын
Most of these languages are not going to add anything to your salary. I love languages, especially French and Japanese. But let's be realistic here.
@rashidah9307
5 ай бұрын
Olly did his research, so I believe him. Of course, he's speaking in terms of general trends, not everyone's personal situation (skill set, geography, age, field, etc).
@andybliss5965
5 ай бұрын
@@rashidah9307 it's very easy to check. Say you're a developer like me. Go on to a jobs board in English speaking countries and see the salaries for a job. Now go and see the salaries in say Japan. You will be paid significantly less. I can't see any job or any situation where you will get paid more in Japan.
@ErtixPoke
5 ай бұрын
Why especially them?
@andybliss5965
5 ай бұрын
@@ErtixPoke they are the countries I know best. I could learn others(have done a few more) but only have so much time.
@thato596
5 ай бұрын
Exactly they will not add to your salary. And also you can travel from netherlands to france by english only
@M10n15u3h5
5 ай бұрын
It is the french speaking province of Canada.
@luishenriquealmeidarocha7007
5 ай бұрын
I'm Brazilian and I'm learning English
@Markothedreamer
5 ай бұрын
I love money!
@storylearning
5 ай бұрын
💰
@meropale
5 ай бұрын
😂
@thaizahonorato
5 ай бұрын
Who doesn't, dude? Lol
@nsevv
5 ай бұрын
Good summary about this channel. that is why we priced the courses so high. money money money..
@nsevv
5 ай бұрын
@@thaizahonorato Buddha and Jesus.
@Iamdonewithhere
5 ай бұрын
As a non native english speaker, most of people here treat english as a most important language. I am majoring in economics but I need to understand( I am lucky that I don't need to speak out. I only need to understand) english to study.
@silentnight8832
4 ай бұрын
We want free app for practicing speaking with native speakers.
@ErtixPoke
5 ай бұрын
My favourite is Japanese. Why? Cause Japanese people and their language are indirect in communication style. Japanese is a high-context language. Unfortunately I do not see any similar European language from a country which would be also safe. What european languages would be close to Japanese in this cathegory?
@AmandaInEly
5 ай бұрын
Olly do s this only work fir young people? My French German and Spanish are good (to varying degrees) but i am scared of the job market and i am nearly 62.
@pierreabbat6157
5 ай бұрын
Brazil has its own German dialect, called Riograndenser Hunsrückisch, or Hunsrik for short. It's spoken in Rio Grande do Sul, não do Norte. AFAIK those are the farthest apart south and north states in the world.
@entropie138
5 ай бұрын
Interesting note: The languages of all three former Axis nations are on the list.
@jeungbou
5 ай бұрын
Because thanks to Breton Woods the age of imperialism is over.
@canchero724
5 ай бұрын
Not surprised, the bad guys always win in real life.
@nHans
5 ай бұрын
As are the languages of one medieval Asian empire and three European colonial empires-your point being?
@tbountybay3080
5 ай бұрын
Question for anyone to answer: what has been language-learning advice that, once you applied, gave you better results?
@perceptions101
5 ай бұрын
You kept Spanish off of the list ?!?!?! Portuguese, Italian and Dutch are more desirable for employers? I have worked at places where they will not hire certain roles such as transporters without Spanish skills… did you mean languages for Europe? Because in America most employers want Spanish, most other ones are if you work with that country
@ThePraQNome
5 ай бұрын
The thing is that Spanish is just like English, there are already so many speakers. So languages like Portuguese, Dutch and German are in demand since there are less people that speak those languages.
@Bailanat0r
5 ай бұрын
As much as people forget, The US is a Spanish speaking country. Of course it’s better to learn spanish there. But like he mentioned with the other languages, it won’t help you as much in Brazil, Europe, Africa and Asia.
@perceptions101
5 ай бұрын
@@Bailanat0r I would think Spanish would be important in Brazil as well… I would say Spanish would easily make the top 10 list almost anywhere which is why I am shocked not to see it here. Also English as well but I figure he is assuming everyone watching can speaks English pretty well so they would want to learn an additional language.
@thaizahonorato
5 ай бұрын
Maybe he didn't mention Spanish cause it's too obvious the language is highly important internationally, then preferred to add other ones to the list.
@nsevv
5 ай бұрын
Did you even watch the video?
@orirosengarten2572
5 күн бұрын
Why is mandarin out?
@trinibeanmi5104
4 ай бұрын
Dutch sounds like that video " what english sounds like to non english speakers " 😂😂 me tryong to figure out what they are saying 😭😭
@vtorious9102
5 ай бұрын
29:19 "You speak Italian? Say something for me" "GABAGOOOOOOO!!!
@wardachrouaa7281
5 ай бұрын
I speak Dutch, Arabic, French, and German from this list, but I can't get a job because I wear a headscarf😑 When I apply for a job they immediately ask whether I'm interested being a cleaning lady, because I'm allowed to wear a headscarf as a cleaning lady. Nope. Thank you EU for allowing institutions to forbid their employees wearing a hijab...
@ErtixPoke
5 ай бұрын
Maybe you should stop wear it?
@mikidias
5 ай бұрын
I feel you 😢 Me too, I wear Hejab on too 🧕🏻, even though I'm myself not middle - Eastern Arab or some other of expat migrant or refugee, but, as soon as they see me, they take me as an middle - Eastern or European eastern gypsy expat or refugee and treat me like 💩 😢 😭 They don't understand that we European Latina women also wear headscarf 🧕🏻, especially during cold winter season ❄️ and especially in the hot summer season 🌞 🥵 in order to protect us from the heat. Plus...., my country is not legally or constitution Religious by law, but it's Secular!!!! Therefore, I wear wherever I want to! 😑 🤦🏼♀️
@WaddiaS
Ай бұрын
@@ErtixPoke maybe you should stop being racist and start recruiting people on merit instead of how they look?
@Schlohmotion
5 ай бұрын
0:53 wich city is this?
@alexone8338
4 ай бұрын
The Dutch won't speak their language to you, even if you address them in good Dutch. You've been warned.
@duckie8651
5 ай бұрын
I get English and Spanish not being on the list. I think at this point, if you are in the market for a job, efficiency in both of those are a given. However, with the increase in companies in China and South Korea, especially tech in South Korea, I'm surprised those respective languages didn't make the list. I generally like Olly's videos, and this one was not an exception. I was just surprised that he didn't make a top 10 list and add those 2 or put them down as an honorable mention. Overall, great video. Thank you very much for the information. Please keep up the quality content, and hard work.
@nsevv
5 ай бұрын
Most chinese and skorean in tech industry speak english. Programming language are in english.
@duckie8651
5 ай бұрын
@nsevv in a couple of the examples given, the actual position was in English but the community and environment was in the home language.
@kevincanuck9863
5 ай бұрын
When talking about French you mentioned the "state" of Quebec. Canada has provinces not states. Just an FYI :)
@nsevv
5 ай бұрын
yaya, papaya.
@nHans
5 ай бұрын
I suppose it's a matter of semantics, but I disagree. "State" is the generic term; "province" is specific to Canada. Hence: • Canada's states are called "provinces." • UK's states are called "countries." • Louisiana's counties are called "parishes." • Quebec's DMV is called "SAAQ." • Japan's dollar is called "Yen." • Michigan's DUI is called "OWI."
@kevincanuck9863
5 ай бұрын
@@nHans i know what you're saying, but I guarantee you that you will never hear a Canadian call their province a state. Just saying.
@nHans
5 ай бұрын
@@kevincanuck9863 I'm aware. The British too don't call their states of England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland as "states"-they call them "countries." But, you know, if it looks like a state, walks like a state ... 🦆🤣
@kevincanuck9863
5 ай бұрын
@@nHans not quite the same thing. I've never heard those countries referred to as states, whereas I hear Canadian provinces referred to as states quite often by those less informed. Call a province a state while in Canada and you will surely be corrected immediately. However, you be you. You want to refer to the provinces as states then have at it.
@gethnoble4316
5 ай бұрын
bahasa Indonesia, dong😀😀😀
@nsevv
5 ай бұрын
This is actually a really useful language to learn, alphabet is same as english too but gives you access to parts of SEA.
@ladycempluk2481
5 ай бұрын
John McWhorter(linguist) suggested that colloquial Indonesian would be an ideal universal language for the world.
@elias_john
5 ай бұрын
Why as Nativ German Speaker should I learn German or Dutch :D
@manyvan2000
5 ай бұрын
The tech geniuses in Bangalore don't speak hindi. Most of the smart ones speak Tamil and the rest speak Telugu.
@coocoointhebrains
4 ай бұрын
I got that i should get a tech degree before i learn a new language 😂😂😂
@FionnDoyle-cf1tx
Ай бұрын
dutch is almost what english sounds like to non english speaker
@nHans
5 ай бұрын
I love it that you recommended Hindi-one out of hundreds of languages of my country India. However, before everybody gets all gung-ho and starts investing real time and money learning it, a quick fact-check might be appropriate. Now it's true that Bollywood movies often cast a White male who speaks bad Hindi as the token villain. But such roles are few and far between-and they don't pay as well as you're probably hoping. So if that's your main reason for wanting to learn Hindi, I'd advice against it. However, if you're a sexy White female who's willing to dance wearing the legal minimum amount of clothing, then you do stand a good chance of getting cast in a Bollywood movie. Another thing-pure Hindi is rarely spoken nowadays. Most people-including all the "Hindi" examples in this video-speak *Hinglish,* which is English vocabulary with Hindi grammar. Hindi doesn't have native words for any modern technology. Techies everywhere in India speak English. Particularly so in Bengaluru (formerly Bangalore), where the state's official language is Kannada, not Hindi.
@octahedron115
5 ай бұрын
Where's Russian at? Maybe I'm wrong
@nsevv
5 ай бұрын
russian is not worth learning, it is one the most difficult language to learn (with the same effort you can learn 2 other languages) and most russian I meet just speak english with us.
@rashidah9307
5 ай бұрын
You're wrong. . . This is about job opportunities, not about the number of speakers.
@lunalui
5 ай бұрын
29:19 Due su otto e una terza che sto cercando d'imparare ormai da anni. È una lotta senza speranza, ma non mollo!
@kitsunerinkan
Ай бұрын
I speak Japanese and actually? You can’t get a job with Japanese. I’m shocked Spanish, Korean and Mandarin aren’t on here, to be quite honest. Japanese is pretty effing worthless. I’ve lived here for 20 years and am bilingual in Japanese and a native English speaker. It’s absolutely worthless the amount of time I’ve spent pouring in to learning this language except for the leg up it’s given me in learning Korean and Mandarin, I suppose…? 😂
@stpapadop
5 ай бұрын
So, if one wants to work in/with [insert country], one should learn [insert country]’s language…great insight
@jmwild22
5 ай бұрын
Video's full of current jobs in unexpected countries.
@stpapadop
5 ай бұрын
@@jmwild22 Oh, I'm sorry I didn't realize that BRICS or major EU economies were unexpected countries...or you mean that the gulf oil-states are unexpected?
@nHans
5 ай бұрын
It was a little more than that; you might have missed the point he was making. This was a list of 8 languages that give you the most bang-for-your-buck-in terms of job opportunities and paycheck size-for the time and effort you put in to learn a new language. So, for example, if you're deciding between learning Spanish v. Portuguese-purely for the sake of jobs that require those languages-then Olly says Portuguese will give you a better paycheck than Spanish. Likewise, go for Japanese rather than Chinese. I hope you get the point now. On the other hand, as you've pointed out: If you've already decided to work in/with some particular country, then there's no question-learn that country's language, regardless of whether or not it appears in Olly's list.
@rashidah9307
5 ай бұрын
It really doesn't sound like you really watched the video very closely. I hate comments like this on KZitem. Haters always gonna hate.
@stpapadop
5 ай бұрын
@@nHans first he didn’t make this kind of comparisons - and second even if he would have done so it would require much backing, the very least some simple statistic on open positions in high paying sectors and number of people who emigrate to those countries
@tomco5973
5 ай бұрын
You forgot mandarin and Russian bro.
@nsevv
5 ай бұрын
Did you even watch the video, dude?? russian is not worth it, it has been proven several times. in the same amount of time one can learn 2 other languages.
@tomco5973
5 ай бұрын
@@nsevvok i'm not a Russian native speaker or I'm not learning Russian. But for mandarin I'm learning it and I think it's worth it because china has become the 2nd largest economy in the world. Due to this, china is a very important country for the economy and the trading of goods. I recommend to learn it instead of dutch🤣. I'm a french native speaker so I'm already speaking french and English (B2in English). I also have a B1 level in Spanish.
@rashidah9307
5 ай бұрын
@@tomco5973 I believe Olly because he did his research.
@tomco5973
5 ай бұрын
@@rashidah9307mandarin is 100 worth it. There are 1 billion. People who are speaking this language so don't be scared to start your journey☺️.
@rashidah9307
5 ай бұрын
@@tomco5973 The purpose of this video is to zero in on languages with strong economic reasons to learn them. Of course, there are MANY other valid reasons for learning a foreign language that don't involve money at all. Just because a country's population is the largest doesn't mean that learning their language will give the biggest financial rewards. . . After reading all these comments about Chinese, Olly probably regrets not mentioning why Chinese is not on his list. . . Lol. Personally, I'm learning Jordanian Arabic, but I don't know that I'll ever make money because of it. But it is opening many doors and helping me to build many bridges, and that's worthwhile to me. ☺
@kimcham9949
5 ай бұрын
Why aren't you asking why watchers are not subscribing?
@storylearning
5 ай бұрын
I'd love to hear why!
@perceptions101
5 ай бұрын
@@storylearningi wouldn’t worry too much about it, many people don’t like subscribing in general. As far as the “algorithm” goes it doesn’t care about subscribers anymore (it used to). They did testing and realized they kept people on the platform longer if they suggest based on content rather than subscriptions. The important thing is that they keep coming back. In fact too many subscribers can hurt you if your views are low compared to subscriptions. Just keep the great content coming!
@MsPeabody1231
5 ай бұрын
@@storylearningNew content from channels I subscribe to does not tend show up on my homepage for weeks. However if I don't subscribe to a channel but have given some of your content a thumbs up, when you upload new content it always appears on my homepage within a couple of hours.
@piki2009
5 ай бұрын
i thinked that it would be chinese on this list
@manfredneilmann4305
5 ай бұрын
I *thought ...
@piki2009
5 ай бұрын
@@manfredneilmann4305 oh sorry jajajaja
@ThePraQNome
5 ай бұрын
More than 1 billion mandarin speakers in China, so strategically it's not worth to learn it.
@piki2009
5 ай бұрын
@@ThePraQNome i dont know if it is because I’m in Spain but many Chinese people come to my country to do business so I don’t if it’s not worth for you but for me yes so
@nsevv
5 ай бұрын
Did you even watch the video?
@granthamwizard4590
5 ай бұрын
Too many adverts
@zaidmaaita3759
5 ай бұрын
I'm sick and tired of people telling me that I should learn French and Japanese. Both stereotypes are very toxic and offensive and I don't wanna be associated with them, and both languages sound very unpleasant on top of them being impossible to master already.
@ErtixPoke
5 ай бұрын
I wonder why especially these languages? Especially French. Yes, French might sounds beautiful but practically it's not the best choice. French-speaking countries are quite dangerous to live in.
@zaidmaaita3759
4 ай бұрын
@@ErtixPokeAn already convincing reason not to learn French. Another one is because French is an impossible-to-master grammatical, phonetical and spelling clusterf**k, plus it doesn't sound pleasant to my ears at all. I'm sorry to break it to you, but as a confused person who grew up hating French, I REFUSE to say that it's easy and beautiful.
@JoshPecks500lbDad
4 ай бұрын
@@ErtixPokefrench is one of the ugliest languages in existence
@JohnnyLynnLee
5 ай бұрын
I'm Brazilian and I'm saying that BRAZIL listed as "to boost your career" is a joke. Since 2012 we can't grow anymore. Almost ALL other emergent countries are growing and ALL other ASIAN emergent countries are growing. In the third quarter of 2022 Brazil's GDP "grew" at a rate of 0.4%. Vietnam's GDP in the same period grew at 13,67%. In the year of 2022 Vietnam grew at 8.2%. Brazil only 2.9%. In 2023 Vietnam grew at 5.05% and Brazil also at 2.9%. And even those 2 and so percent are misleading. Mostly due to the agrobusiness. Industry in Brazil in fact CONTRACTED in this period. And yeas, I'm learning Vietnamese. Run away form my country! Like I'm doing.
@EJej-z5g
5 ай бұрын
As if learning 8 languages is something that can be done FAST...
@creativecatproductions
5 ай бұрын
Study….Arabic….like, which one? Good luck with that.
@nHans
5 ай бұрын
I'll assume you genuinely want to know-that you're not merely trolling. So yeah-when you learn Arabic formally as a foreign language, you learn Modern Standard Arabic (MSA). That's what's taught in schools to children in Arab-speaking countries. That's what's used in formal and written communications. All educated Arab speakers know MSA. True, there are regional dialects, and many of them are hard-often impossible-to understand if you aren't used to it. But that's true for any widely-spoken language, including English. Fluency in MSA will get you the job that requires you to know Arabic. You won't have trouble with written communication. You can even get along by speaking MSA. Native Arabic speakers, of course, don't usually speak in MSA. But they'll be able to understand you. They may reply to you in MSA, or if not, at the very least, they'll speak their own dialect more slowly and carefully to help you understand. In fact, that's pretty much what happens when two Arabs with different dialects-say, an Egyptian and a Yemeni-talk to each other. Over time, you'll pick up the required dialect (or dialects) for every-day and informal talk.
@creativecatproductions
5 ай бұрын
@@nHans But what percentage of that Arabic speaking population speak according to a formalized Modern Standard Arabic…..and conversely, of the population which actually does, what percentage of those people don’t already speak fluent English too? It seems to defeat the point of learning, which isn’t to speak with English speakers in a college level, theoretical version of a language that has dialects that are hardly mutually intelligible in terms of “how normal people actually speak to each other in the street”…..and not just super elites
@creativecatproductions
5 ай бұрын
@@nHans thank you for the thoughtful and excellent clarification though. But my point is that learning to speak with people in “Arabic” doesn’t make a lot sense. The same is true with “German” and Spanish. Spanish speakers can’t always understand each other perfectly well across countries. Heck, when I was a kid, English speakers WITHIN the US could hardly understand each other all that well across regions! Some languages are highly, highly regionalized into dialects and that has to be understood thoroughly before committing hundreds of hours of study.
@rashidah9307
5 ай бұрын
@@creativecatproductions It doesn't mean that those languages aren't worth learning. Olly literally presented facts about how people who are fluent in Arabic can earn more. I have been studying Jordanian Arabic and someday I'll probably learn how to read and write in standard Arabic. I have many Arab friends, and many people in the Middle East do not speak a lot of English. Arabic learners who want to work in humanitarian fields or for agencies that work with refugees will not be able to get by with just English. Yes, you will need to choose a dialect (which will make it easier to learn other dialects) and, yes, you may also probably need to learn how to read and write MSA. It's a long journey for sure, but I definitely think it's worth it. Sorry if you tried to learn Arabic and got discouraged... The deeper you get into it, the easier it becomes.
@mikidias
5 ай бұрын
Ahahaha 😂 😂 That's a very good one, I admit it!! 👌🏻 🤣 Personally, I've chosen Saudi dialect (Saudi w Khalliji dialect), because I plan on to move - out from here to there, I mean, to relocate to Saudi 🇸🇦 or Yemen 🇾🇪 I dream on to settle down and stay living over there... InshAllah!! 🙏🏻 😇
@alioth7403
5 ай бұрын
I stopped watching and unsubscribed when I saw you omitted Spanish. What a disservice to your viewers.
@rashidah9307
5 ай бұрын
Really?? What in the world? Olly has created other videos that encourage people to learn Spanish.
@juandavidlondonobetancur8350
5 ай бұрын
I think Spanish was pretty obvious, so it’s not worth it to put it on the video 😂
@ThePraQNome
5 ай бұрын
Billions of people already speak Spanish and/or English, so there's no point of mentioning those languages.
@codyscott8687
5 ай бұрын
Olly my biggest problem is you can convince me to learn anything 😅 I’ve dedicated 2024 to sharpening my Spanish, but for 2025 I’m going to begin learning a new language. I’m currently excited about Arabic, French, and German. However, I’m indecisive because I’m the most excited about the one I’m currently thinking of 🤣😅
@kendalllafollette1948
3 ай бұрын
oof, what a terrible list. it depends on the country but internationally you want in this order, 1. english, 2. mandarin, 3. russian, 4. spanish, 5. french, 6. portugues. english and spanish will cover the entire western hemisphere. chinese and russian cover the east. think about how many former soviet countries still have a russian usage. countries like kazakstan, uzbekistan etc., largest two economies in the world are english speaking and mandarin speaking.
@orirosengarten2572
5 күн бұрын
Add Mongolian too
@ReniCosta-oo3tr
5 ай бұрын
Dear Olly! I was born in Brazil; I l've been living in Brazil since I was born and I never thing get away from Brazil. I lived abroad couple years, but my Country Brazil is the country I still "In love". Believe you or not I want to die here, in Brazil.💚🌎👏💙
@autokafer4031
5 ай бұрын
💩
@JohnnyLynnLee
5 ай бұрын
I'm Brazilian and I'm saying that BRAZIL listed as "to boost your career" is a joke. Since 2012 we can't grow anymore. Almost ALL other emergent countries are growing and ALL other ASIAN emergent countries are growing. In the third quarter of 2022 Brazil's GDP "grew" at a rate of 0.4%. Vietnam's GDP in the same period grew at 13,67%. In the year of 2022 Vietnam grew at 8.2%. Brazil only 2.9%. In 2023 Vietnam grew at 5.05% and Brazil also at 2.9%. And even those 2 and so percent are misleading. Mostly due to the agrobusiness. Industry in Brazil in fact CONTRACTED in this period. And yeas, I'm learning Vietnamese. Run away form my country! Like I'm doing.
@STYR0710
5 ай бұрын
I was looking for an excuse to stop learning italian since I am already learning Japanese but thanks to this video I found out that I should not stop learning those and that my next language will be portugese
@hellyripphin8357
5 ай бұрын
amazed that Chinese is not on the list! I wonder why? Danke schoen :-)
@nsevv
5 ай бұрын
you mean mandarin?
@hellyripphin8357
5 ай бұрын
@@nsevv OMG what a horrific error I have made. Me and many other people who simply think of the language that is spoken in China as 'Chinese'.
@ItsNothingAmazing
10 күн бұрын
@@hellyripphin8357 are you talking about Cantonese? I can't quite tell
@fmentz
5 ай бұрын
hi Olly will storylearning ever have support for greek?
@coolbrotherf127
5 ай бұрын
As an Alabamian, I can confirm there are quite a few Arabic speaking communities here at least in urban/suburban areas. Also quite a few Hindi and Korean committees as well.
@itchyPoncho
5 ай бұрын
shout out to Birmingham, AL! love and hate that place at the sametime lol
@Kanguruo
5 ай бұрын
Fast? Really? It takes hundreds if not thousands of hours to learn those languages, so how could it be a way to boost your resume fast? You might be able to boost your resume in 5 years' time. Is that fast? Please be honest.
@jmwild22
5 ай бұрын
You can learn a language to higher intermediate level in one year if you practise every day. I think that's fast when we're talking about improving a resume overall. "This time next year..." You rarely need to be native level to get a job, anyway -- just fluid enough to communicate and understand what's going on. Ask the foreigners working in your own country. I see so much of this. And like Olly said, many recruiters just want to see that you're actually trying, so if your resume says 'Italian' but you're only halfway there, it's fine -- you've already improved your resume!
@lisamarydew
5 ай бұрын
It's about having the language on your resume, and you don't need to be fluent to justify that - just B1 - B2. I'd put a language on my resume even if was still at A2, because it shows employers I'm learning.
Пікірлер: 351