I think Japanese is the most difficult language as far as I know because it has "Keigo", which means special polite form of sentences. it is difficult even for us, native Japanese speakers. If you are a learner of Japanese, you don't have to care much about "Keigo", but it's so common in daily conversation that if you don't know "Keigo" you can't understand even easy conversation.
We also use "Kanji", which is Chinese character, and two other characters "hiragana" and "katakana" There are other many factors that makes learners confused. Verbs shoud be changed in various ways depending on the context just like German. The grammar is totally different from taht of languages derived fom Latin.
But, Japanese pronunciation is the easiset in the world. Every single letter consist of a consonant and a vowel. It has only 5 vowel sounds and doesn't have intonation unlike Thai, Vietnamese, and Chinese. Only one thing difficult for non-native Japanese is double consonant. I don't know how to explain it. If you want to know about double consonant, ask Google. :)
I'm sorry if it is hard to read, and I hope it doesn't distract you from studying Japanese. Every language has good aspects and difficulties.
日本語は難しいよ~~。笑
I think it should not emphasize languages. I was suck every subject but I found that is egocentrism that make me cant accept things out of me. if you open it you can understand.
We have god to help me it, though it is blind faith but you can understand it too.
not between right and wrong only two options.
and I found
Many thing I cant understand in chinese but I can easy understand from english.
maybe that is translation’s problem maybe that is the way of english.
Anyway I think just need to make an effort and try to understand different culture
that can solve many problems that I need.
I've been always thinking that different individual has different opinions on this topic because everyone has different levels of abilities to master one language or many languages.
I'm learning Finnish, Mongolian, Manchu, Inupiaq, Vietnamese, Malaysian, Korean and Japanese. Each of them has different difficulties, and here's my opinions
I think grammatically speaking, Inupiaq is the most difficult in all of these languages I'm now attempting to learn and the second most difficult is Finnish; Finnish has 14 noun cases but fortunately most of these cases stand for direction not grammatical meaning; about Inupiaq, it's an "ergative-absolutive" language, I don't feel very familiar with this system so it's kind of hard to me, plus, the verb conjugation is weird because it consists of transitive conjugation and intransitive conjugation
Vietnamese, Korean and Japanese are "relatively" easier for me to learn because they were all affected by ancient Chinese language a lot, so I find it a piece of cake to master their vocabularies;
Mongolian and Malaysian are hard, too; they're both different from other languages I'm learning, so different language systems, different vocabularies.
"Türkce", solo porque esta idioma tiene una alma que no me puedo aprender. Por ejemplo, decir "Te amo" esta es "Seni seviyorum", o "Tu (seni) (soy amar) (-sevi) -yorum (-ando).