... in response to Spanish Vocabulary Question..., posted by yc on Oct 26, 2004Here is my analysis as someone who is fluent in French and Spanish and teaches ESL to students who are learning English. My analysis is less technical and more pragmatic than the one you cited.
I tell my students that the most difficult challenge in English is pronunciation. We have no consistent pronunciation rules whereas Spanish is always pronounced the same. So it is MUCH easier to learn Spanish pronunciation.
Spanish grammer is harder because we must know the gender of nouns (el libro is masculine, la mesa is femainine) and since adjectives must agree with nouns (take the same gender we have un libro lindo and una mesa linda. Every vocabulary word we must learn the gender, and when we speak we must remember to change adjectives.
English verbs have only one change...talk is talks in the 3rd person singular. Our tenses use a prior word and don't require different endings. The only irregularity that is harder in English is past participles. There are about 150 common irregular past participles in English and 11 in Spanish.
Spanish verbs are a killer. There is a book 501 Spanish verbs. You could probably reduce this to 100 verbs and 400 which follow one of these patterns. But in English there are virtually no irregular verbs (and only one, the verb to be, has more than one irregular form in the present). Several pages with the past and past participle irregularities and you have it for irregular English verbs. In Grammar III, I have a verb drill where my students learn the 100 most common verbs and they basically know English verbs.
Besides irregularities, there are verb endings in the imprefect, future and past for the learner to mess up. Subjunctive is very large and important in Spanish and virtually not existant in English.
In sum, I consider the languages of equal difficulty but once you are good, the Spanish learner will make more mistakes because there are more gramatical details. It is harder to produce than to receive input so you can understand more than you can say and you can read more than you can write.
My suggestion is to take Spanish I and II at a community college. It's cheap and you get the basic grammar without which you don't have a structure to build on.