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In English there is the simple rules for ght, ph, ce and other combinations, thing about Hebrew is different because Hebrew has also diacritic signs (Niqqud) in addition to those combinations including different variation begginings/endings for plural/single,male/female and time to adjectives and verbs, different phrase for questions while adjectives usually used after the nouns.Hebrew is a complicated language by it's core, while the local Arabic is quite poor comparing to Egyptian Arabic for instanc, however any language is a huge advantage and common Arabic is among the highest.To a degree yes but then again no. International sigh would open the world to and for the deaf and mute. A native form of speech would always be kept but one could sign a GLOBAL language.Esperanto, anyone?
We already have a global language, and we're using it this very moment. English is the defacto world language in at least business circles.
"There is an up-side; as Americans, we are at an advantage because the majority of executives from around the globe deem English to be the international business language, followed by Mandarin and Spanish."
Bailey Language Barriers and Miscommunications are Stifling Growth
I watched a Youtube in which an interviewer asked Arabs who live in Israel proper (Israeli Arabs) if they wish to destroy Israel. They all said no. And most of them could speak Hebrew better than me, an American Jew.
In some ways Hebrew is easier than English. The words are usually spelled the way they sound. Take the English word "light", for example. What's a "g" doing in there?
However the English vocabulary is about three times bigger I think.