<p>I am trying to find a college that offers most if not all of the following language courses: Russian, Finnish, Farsi, Arabic, Chinese, Latvian, Thai, Turkish, Somali, German, Japanese, maybe Moroccan. If you guys and gals can help it would be awesome as I am wanting to learn all of these languages.</p>
<p>for starters their is no language called Moroccan or Chinese
in Morocco they speak Arabic and other people speak a few other languages mainly Bebrer and in China there are a lot of languages Mandarin I guess is the main one.I would not choose a school in the United States based on a language program, if you really want to learn a language maybe get a study visa and live in Finland, Latvia or Germany to learn those languages. Somalia is out of the question, and Morocco is more forward thinking,less oppressive and slightly more tolerant then the rest of its neighbors it is siting of a powder keg.</p>
<p>Generally, the larger the college, the more languages it will offer. You’re not going to be able to learn all of those languages during college, anyway - there’s just not time. What’s your aim for all this language study?</p>
<p>I am planning to work for my Uncles company as a translator/ interpreter and those are the languages that i love and he has business in at least one of each of the countries that speak the listed languages. Its simply that I love the sound and culture of them, plus I will be using them to help my Uncle once I go to work for him</p>
<p>Moroccan is a dialect version of Arabic just like we have slang in America it is simply the unique way Arabic is spoken in morocco. Also when I mentioned Chinese I figured it would be understood I was talking Mandarin it was my mistake I should have specified.</p>
<p>CrossnoJ -</p>
<p>You should compose a clear title for your post. Something along the line of “Good Schools for Translation and Interpretation” and then re-post this.</p>
<p>Translating and interpreting are very specific skills that are hard to come by. Acquiring the level of fluency needed for this many languages is very challenging. You may be best served by studying at language institutes in the countries where these languages are spoken, and by picking up a translator certificate in one or more of them either in those countries or at one of the few colleges and universities that offer them. If you really want a four year degree, I’d suggest business so that you are prepared to manage the flock of translators & interpreters that this number of languages would require your uncle’s business to employ. With that large a variety, I’d expect much of the work would be taken on be independent contractors who specialize in only one or two of these languages, and who are also doing contract work for several different businesses and government agencies.</p>