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Kanchou wrote:I for one see noting wrong with having a single language spoken by the majority of the population that unites the world...but that's only because it's going to be English.
Kanchou wrote:The vast majority of foreign languages are *already* local languages... Japanese has never been anything but a local language (unless you count anime fans...which I don't). German is much of the same...spoken primarily in three or four small countries that border each other.
Coligny wrote:It's a much more precise and pleasant language.
Screwed-down Hairdo wrote:English may be in the global ascendancy now, but I would guess in maybe 100 years from now, languages such as Mandarin and Hindi may be strongly challenging that dominance.
But I can't help but think I have wasted my life dedicating myself to its study.
Samurai_Jerk wrote:The biggest stumbling block to Mandarin becoming the world language is the writing system. Maybe if they do like the Vietnamese and switch to a romanized alphabet. I don't think it would ever be Hindi because not even everyone in India speaks it and anyone there who is educated speaks English and uses it for business already anyway.
Coligny wrote:Agree to disagree, it have to be French, english is more commonly used since the 20th century only. Before that French was everywhere. It's a much more precise and pleasant language. Why settle for something inferior ?
Coligny wrote:Japanese is not even a language, more like a totally ungoverned pidgin.
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