most difficult languages to learn in the world

Most Difficult Languages to learn in the world

11. Sanskrit
Considered the primary liturgical language of Hinduism, Jainism and Buddhism, Sanskrit is a dialect of Old Indo Aryan that originated from the ProtoIndoIranian and ProtoIndoEuropean. It is also listed among the 22 scheduled languages of India and covers a rich and vast tradition of drama and poetry as well as philosophical and technical texts.
12. Korean
Korean is the official language of North and South Korea and is spoken by over 80 million people around the world.
13. Hebrew
Hebrew is a West Semitic language that belongs to the Afroasiatic language family and was first used by ancient Hebrews and Israelites during the 10th century BCE.
14. Urdu
More commonly known as the Modern Standard Urdu, this language is normally associated with Muslims in Hindustan. Urdu is also the official national language and lingua franca in the country of Pakistan. One of the 22 scheduled languages in the Constitution of India, it is mutually intelligible with Standard Hindi and is identical to Hindi in terms of grammar and basic structure
15. Welsh
Welsh Language is part of the Brythonic branch of the Celtic languages used in Wales. This language also used to be called Cambric,Cymric, Cambrian and British tongue.
16. Basque
Basque is the ancestral language of the Basque Country, which spans from the northeastern part of Spain to southwestern France. Almost 27% of the total population of Basque territories speaks the language.
17. Danish
Spoken by more than six million people around the world, Danish is a North Germanic language that currently holds a minority language status. In Greenland, around 1520% of the total population speaks this language. It is mutually intelligible with Swedish and Norwegian languages and is a descendant of Old Norse.
18. Afrikaans
A West Germanic language, Afrikaans is spoken by the natives of Namibia and South Africa, as well as Zimbabwe and Botswana. It is considered an offshoot of different Dutch dialects and thus a daughter language of Dutch.
19. Slovenian
The Slovenian language is part of the South Slavic language group and is spoken by over 2.5 million speakers around the world, mostly in Slovenia. This language is one of the 24 official and working languages of the European Union and is based on Upper and Lower Carniolan dialect groups.
20. Dutch
This language is a West Germanic language that is mostly spoken in the Netherlands, Belgium and Suriname. It currently holds an official status in Aruba, Sint Maarten, and Curacao; and in many portions of Europe and the United States. Dutch language is closely related to English and German and does not use the Germanic umlaut as a grammatical marker.