For Vietnamese speakers, some languages are especially tough because they differ massively in grammar, sound systems, and writing. Here are 5 of the hardest, with clear reasons:


🧠 1. German language

👉 Hard mainly because of grammar

  • 4 grammatical cases (Nominative, Accusative, Dative, Genitive)
  • 3 genders (der / die / das)
  • Word order changes depending on sentence structure

👉 Why hard for Vietnamese:

  • Vietnamese has no cases, no gender, no conjugation
  • German forces you to “think structurally” in a new way

🧠 2. Russian language

👉 Even harder grammar than German

  • 6 cases
  • Verb aspects (perfective vs imperfective)
  • Completely different alphabet (Cyrillic)

👉 Why hard:

  • You must learn new script + complex grammar together

🧠 3. Arabic language

👉 Very different from Asian/European languages

  • Written right → left
  • Letters change shape depending on position
  • Root-based word system (3-letter roots)

👉 Why hard:

  • Almost no similarity to Vietnamese or English
  • Pronunciation includes unfamiliar throat sounds

🧠 4. Japanese language

👉 A “triple difficulty” language

  • 3 writing systems:
    • Hiragana
    • Katakana
    • Kanji (Chinese characters)
  • Complex honorific system (politeness levels)
  • Different sentence structure (SOV)

👉 Why hard:

  • Writing alone can take years to master

🧠 5. Korean language

👉 Looks easier, but tricky in practice

  • Alphabet (Hangul) is easy
  • But:
    • Grammar is very different (SOV)
    • Many speech levels (formal/informal)
    • Verb endings change constantly

👉 Why hard:

  • You must adjust how you speak depending on social context

🎯 Honorable mention (also very hard)

  • French language → pronunciation & spelling mismatch
  • Thai language → tones + writing system
  • Chinese language → characters + tones

🧾 Final takeaway

👉 Hardest for Vietnamese = languages that have:

  • ❌ Complex grammar (cases, conjugation)
  • ❌ New writing systems
  • ❌ Very different pronunciation

👉 Easiest tend to be:

  • Similar structure
  • Or already familiar via English/Chinese influence

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