The place to ask China-related questions!
Beijing Shanghai Guangzhou Shenzhen Chengdu Xi'an Hangzhou Qingdao Dalian Suzhou Nanjing More Cities>>

Categories

Close
Welcome to eChinacities Answers! Please or register if you wish to join conversations or ask questions relating to life in China. For help, click here.
X

Verify email

Your verification code has been sent to:

Didn`t receive your code? Resend code

By continuing you agree to eChinacities's Privacy Policy .

Sign up with Google Sign up with Facebook
Sign up with Email Already have an account? .
anonymous
0
0
You must be a registered user to vote!
You must be a registered user to vote!
0

Q: What's the second most popular foreign language to learn in China besides English?

14 years 8 weeks ago in  General  - Beijing

 
Answers (5)
Comments (4)
Posts: 1968

Emperor

0
0
You must be a registered user to vote!
You must be a registered user to vote!
0

This was discussed recently on these Forums, and if my memory serves me correctly, the kind-of-consesus was that it was French or perhaps Spanish, followed closely by Japanese and maybe even Korean.

Report Abuse
14 years 8 weeks ago
 
0
0
You must be a registered user to vote!
You must be a registered user to vote!
0

Proper decent non-aggressive English?

GuilinRaf:

Aha! A challenge to a duel! Very well Sir, tonight at midnight! You may choose your weapons: pistols, swords, or if you are feeling REALLY brave,  a bottle of cheap bei jiu!

13 years 24 weeks ago
Report Abuse

GuilinRaf:

OR, we could just share a couple of pints of Guinness.....

13 years 24 weeks ago
Report Abuse

lokethebloke:

Where can I find cheaper Guinness?   Last time I drank it was at the Commune at the Great Wall at 75 for a small bottle.   Very happy to join you if you can find it cheaper.

13 years 24 weeks ago
Report Abuse
Report Abuse
13 years 24 weeks ago
 
Posts: 703

Shifu

0
0
You must be a registered user to vote!
You must be a registered user to vote!
0

Based on my experiences, I would have to say Japanese.

GuilinRaf:

I agree, though popular in terms of amount of people taking it. I have yet to meet someone taking Japanese because they love the language or the culture.

I would guess that  French would be teh next popular one.  I have only met two Spanish speaking Chinese in my six years here, one of whom learned it growing  up in Cuba.

13 years 24 weeks ago
Report Abuse
Report Abuse
13 years 24 weeks ago
 
Posts: 149

Shifu

0
0
You must be a registered user to vote!
You must be a registered user to vote!
0

The horrid french tongue!  Makes women turn to mush but sounds so gay.

Report Abuse
13 years 24 weeks ago
 
Posts: 68

Governor

0
0
You must be a registered user to vote!
You must be a registered user to vote!
0

Probably French but it would be a lot smarter and useful to learn Spanish since 18% of the world's pipulation speaks it. So if you could speak English, Chinese, and English, you could communicate with 76% of the world's population.

Report Abuse
13 years 24 weeks ago

Whatever. Just throw me a bone to chew on while you rant.

 
Know the answer ?
Please or register to post answer.

Report Abuse

Security Code: * Enter the text diplayed in the box below
Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <img> <br> <p> <u>
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Textual smileys will be replaced with graphical ones.

More information about formatting options

Forward Question

Answers HighlightMORE >>
A: You can still skin into China as a non-English native teacher by holdi
A:You can still skin into China as a non-English native teacher by holding English Teaching license in your home country.2nd: Your BA degree should be completed in a native English country. Once, you fulfilled these 'parameters', you qualify for an English teaching job in China as a non-native English sneaker with Z - Entry/Working visa with Working and Residence permit later on. See the last 'Answers Highlight' ---> there is a web link posted about 'requirements for teaching English language in China as a non-English native passport holder'. https://www.gooverseas.com/blog/guide-teaching-english-china#paragraph-item-63614-target

*English proficiency: Passport from one of seven "native speaker" countries (US, UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, and South Africa). If you aren’t a native speaker, you’ll need to be a certified teacher in your home country with proof of your English proficiency (e.g. IELTS or TOEFL). I'd say, Chinese will choose and look especially for a native English speaker at teaching of English Literature job openings. Posted job adverts for English Literature teaching are most likely from International Schools in China. Good luck! -- icnif77