Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Latin as preparation for law or med school.
And if you don’t want to do either of those?
It’s still beneficial and helps expand vocabulary, grammar, and analytical skills for English. IMO, Latin is the most useful of all the languages
No it’s not it’s not spoken
Anonymous wrote:I’m certainly not an elite, but I suspect that if elites care about foreign language they probably hire native speakers as nannies and start lessons in elementary, if not preschool. They may send their kids abroad or seek out immersion programs. Whatever your kid learns in middle school isn’t likely to impress elites.
I suggest that if your child has any preference at all, you let them choose. A language’s usefulness depends on the skill of the speaker. Whichever language motivates them to learn and possibly continue to more advanced levels will benefit them the most. As PPs have suggested, there are great reasons to choose many languages. Keep in mind, however, that much of the world speaks English better than your child is likely to learn any foreign language.
Anonymous wrote:Spanish is by far the easiest language for Americans to learn. So a vote for that.
Mandarin is not as hard as people think. No verb tenses, for example. So no endless conjugation, which feels like what I spent years doing in French class. But it is very different from romantic/alphabet based languages.
Anonymous wrote:The super elite travel so much that they are fluent in English, Spanish and French and know enough to get by in Italian and Japanese. Maybe some German.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Latin as preparation for law or med school.
And if you don’t want to do either of those?
It’s still beneficial and helps expand vocabulary, grammar, and analytical skills for English. IMO, Latin is the most useful of all the languages
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Latin as preparation for law or med school.
And if you don’t want to do either of those?
Anonymous wrote:Latin as preparation for law or med school.