Entries Tagged 'Russian' ↓

Getting Real: Translations

This post is about the book by 37signals, Getting Real, and the translations available. Finding and reading material that interests you in your target language is a great way to learn. Getting Real is a great book for software developers and just so happens to be available in many languages. You can read more about the book at Getting Real: The Book by 37signals, and here is a little snippet:

Getting Real is the business, design, programming, and marketing philosophies of 37signals — a developer of web-based software used by over 1 million people and businesses in 70 countries.

37signals used the unconventional Getting Real process to launch five successful web-based applications (Basecamp, Campfire, Backpack, Writeboard, Ta-da List), and Ruby on Rails, an open-source web application framework, in just two years with no funding, no debt, and only 7 people.

If you happen to be a software developer and are learning a language in which the book has already been translated, you’re in luck! What you came here for: Getting Real: Translations.

Top Ten Spoken Languages in the World

If your main purpose of learning foreign languages is the ability to speak to as many people as possible in their native language, then knowing the top ten languages spoken throughout the world is important.

From Wikipedia:

Rank Language Family Ethnologue (2005 estimate) Encarta estimate
Tenth German Indo-European, Germanic, West 95.4 million 100.1 million
Ninth Japanese Japanese-Ryukyuan 122 million 125 million
Eighth Russian Indo-European, Slavic, East 145 million 167 million
Seventh Portuguese Indo-European, Italic, Romance 177.5 million 176 million
Sixth Hindi Indo-European, Indo-Iranian, Indo-Aryan 181 million 366 million
Fifth Arabic Afro-Asiatic, Semitic 206 million 422 million
Fourth Bengali Indo-European, Indo-Iranian, Indo-Aryan 230 million 207 million
Third English Indo-European, Germanic, West 309 million 341 million
Second Spanish Indo-European, Italic, Romance 322 million 322 million
First Mandarin Sino-Tibetan, Chinese 873 million

I’m sure you see the disputes in the number of speakers for each language between Ethnologue and Encarta. There are a number of factors that come into play when building a list such as this, none of which I will discuss here — they are far too boring.

There are certainly other lists available for different purposes. If you want the most useful languages to learn RIGHT NOW, this is certainly not the list. You may have entirely different reasons for learning another language, or multiples. Whatever your reason, that’s the most important one. Now, get to learning your next language!

Please see the Wikipedia source for more and the most up-to-date information on the matter.