I don't know about that. We do have unique vocabulary that you'll only learn via immersion, and our conjugation system might probably keep a total noob to the language in a state of suffering during the early part of studying. The biggest issue with foreigners trying to learn Finnish seems to be getting the accent right however. English speakers for example, as a rule of thumb, are horrible at pronouncing Finnish, unless corrected by years of practice. I'm personally experiencing similar with Slavic languages like Czech and Polish, with their funky pronunciation. Anyway, why would a foreigner wanna learn Finnish anyway is beyond me, at least in the south, English gets you by just fine.Caesius wrote:Moreover, I've heard that Finnish is one of the hardest European languages to learn for other Europeans, because the only other European languages it has anything in common with are Hungarian and Estonian. The vocabulary probably isn't so bad, but the grammar is apparently a nightmare.
But back on topic, I've been "studying" Japanese on and off for about 6 years now. I have a grasp of the basic grammar and some vocabulary, but the problem is that I've recently found it very difficult to sacrifice the time needed to study intensively. This has especially hurt my studying of the Kanji writing system. I still heavily rely on machine reading of those. But I do nurture my existing, meager knowledge of the language, as it has proven itself invaluable with some untranslated manga and video games. As a bit of trivia, pronouncing Japanese is actually quite simple to a Finn, the pronunciation system is almost the same.