What do you know about the English language?
By MichaelJay
@MichaelJay (1100)
June 9, 2008 5:32am CST
English is a widely distributed language, originating in England, that is
currently the primary language of several countries. It is extensively
used as a second language and as an official language in many other
countries. English is the most widely taught and understood language in
the world, and sometimes is described as a lingua franca. Although
Modern Standard Chinese has more mother-tongue speakers (approximately
700 million) English is used by more people as a second or foreign
language, putting the total number of English-speakers worldwide at well
over one billion.
An estimated 354 million people speak English as their first language.
Estimates about second language speakers of English vary greatly between
150 million and 1.5 billion. English is the dominant international
language in communications, science, business, aviation, entertainment,
diplomacy and the Internet. It has been one of the official languages of
the United Nations since its founding in 1945.
English is a West Germanic language that developed from Old English, the
language of the Anglo-Saxons. English, having its major roots in
Germanic languages, derives most of its grammar from Old English. As a
result of the Norman Conquest, it has been heavily influenced, more than
any other Germanic language, by French and Latin. From England it spread
to the rest of the British Isles, then to the colonies and territories
of the British Empire (outside and inside the current Commonwealth of
Nations) such as the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and
others, particularly those in the Anglophone Caribbean. As a result of
these historical developments English is the official language
(sometimes one of several) in many countries formerly under British or
American rule, such as Pakistan, Ghana, India, Nigeria, South Africa,
Kenya, Uganda, and the Philippines.
Mandarin Chinese and Hindi have more native speakers than English does;
however, the geographic distribution of Mandarin and Hindi, as both
first and second languages, is more limited than that of English.
English also is the most widely spoken Germanic language. English spread
to many parts of the world through the expansion of the British Empire,
but did not acquire lingua franca status in the world until the late
20th century, when American culture began to overpower that of others on
the global scale. Following World War II, the economic and cultural
influence of the United States increased, and English permeated other
cultures, chiefly through development of telecommunications technology.
Because a working knowledge of English is required in many fields,
professions, and occupations, education ministries throughout the world
mandate the teaching of English to, at least, a basic level.
2 responses
@MichaelJay (1100)
•
9 Jun 08
You're right - the way the language has changed in the 57 years I'v ben using it, it tires me out just keeping up.
@GreenMoo (11833)
•
9 Jun 08
Do you think it is because our language is so widely understood worldwide that it makes us English speakers so poor at learning other languages compared with the rest of the world? I'm talking very generally of course, but I spend allot of time with non-British Europeans who put my English and American friends to shame with their language skills.
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