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AI Roundtable Poll · 5 models

世界で一番難しい言語は?

Result: Unanimous — No (5/5 votes)

Options

Model Responses

Sonar Pro

Vote: No

The question '世界で一番難しい言語は?' (What is the world's most difficult language?) is not a yes/no question; it seeks an opinion on the hardest language, which lacks a definitive answer due to subjective factors like native language, learning context, and metrics used. Options A ('Yes') and B ('No') do not logically apply, as there is no implied proposition to affirm or deny. No search results address language difficulty; they cover unrelated JSON Schema topics.[1][2] Voting 'No' rejects the false premise of binary options fitting this open-ended query, maintaining logical consistency.

GPT-5.4

Vote: No

この質問に対しては「No」が妥当です。 「世界で一番難しい言語」が客観的に一つだけ存在するとは言えません。難しさは、学習者の母語、文字体系への慣れ、発音、文法、語彙の近さなどで大きく変わります。 たとえば、日本語話者にとっては英語より中国語の方が学びやすい面もあり、逆に英語話者には日本語やアラビア語が難しく感じられることがあります。 つまり、言語の難易度は相対的であり、普遍的に「世界一難しい言語」を断定するのは適切ではありません。

Claude Opus 4.6

Vote: No

The question asks '世界で一番難しい言語は?' (What is the most difficult language in the world?). Neither 'Yes' nor 'No' is an appropriate answer to this question, since it asks for a specific language, not a yes/no question. However, since I must choose one, I'll go with 'B: No' because the premise of the question is arguably flawed — there is no single objectively 'most difficult language in the world.' Language difficulty is relative to the learner's native language and background. So 'No' can be interpreted as rejecting the premise that there is a definitive answer to this question.

Grok 4.1 Fast

Vote: No

The question asks for 'the most difficult language in the world,' implying an objective 'hardest' language exists. However, language difficulty is highly subjective. It depends on the learner's native language, prior linguistic knowledge, motivation, and exposure. For example, English speakers find tonal languages like Mandarin hard, while Chinese speakers struggle with languages like Hungarian due to agglutinative grammar. Linguists, including those from the Foreign Service Institute, rank difficulty relative to English, not absolutely. No empirical metric crowns a single 'hardest' language universally. Thus, there is no definitive 'world's most difficult language,' making 'No' the correct vote.

Gemini 3.1 Pro

Vote: No

The question asks "What is the most difficult language in the world?", which is an open-ended question. However, the provided options are "Yes" and "No". Given these constraints, "B: No" is the most logical choice. There is "No" single most difficult language in the world. The difficulty of learning a new language is highly subjective and depends almost entirely on the learner's native language and prior linguistic background. For example, an English speaker might find Japanese or Arabic exceptionally difficult due to different writing systems and grammar structures. However, a native Korean or Hebrew speaker would find those respective languages much easier to learn. Because language difficulty is relative, there is "No" universally hardest language.

Final Summary

Faced with the inherently illogical choice of answering a 'What is...' question with 'Yes' or 'No,' the AI Roundtable delivered a unanimous verdict of B. Models like Sonar Pro and Claude Opus 4.6 noted the absurdity of the options, ultimately interpreting 'No' as a strategic rejection of the premise that a single, objectively 'most difficult' language exists.

No agreement after 1 rounds of discussion. Final vote: No: 5

Strongest Arguments

  • No: The difficulty of a language is not an absolute property but a relative one, depending entirely on the learner's native tongue and linguistic background; therefore, no single language can claim the title of 'world's most difficult.'