Poll: One world language... that isn't yours.

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zebrasv

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Nov 2, 2009
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You give me little choice in this one, spanish is my main language so that one is out, i can't vote english or italian because neither of them are there so i guess my vote goes to german or esperanto.
 

snow

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Jan 14, 2010
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Quenya, language of the elves!

But in all seriousness.. Japanese, language of... The Japanese. >.>
 

LostAlone

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Sep 3, 2010
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I went with Esperanto, not because I'd want it, but because if we were going to have a world language, we should make a new one. Its a dumb idea to pick an existing language as the language for the whole of humanity unless by far the majority of people already speak it. Assuming we have to inconvenience anyone, then we may as well do it to everyone. Least then everyone gets a fair start.

How are we going to enforce a world language anyway ? I always assumed that any official language shows up purely because thats what everyone speaks. Unless we had one country covering the whole world I can't see why this would happen... Also, English is winning the race for world language anyway. Sure chinese and spanish have more first language speakers, but English is pretty much the de fact second language anywhere that doesn't speak it natively. Something like 1.8bil people have English as first or second language.

You can really tell that its an internet poll when Japanese (180mil speakers) beats Chinese (1.3bil speakers) and Spanish (500mil speakers) combined because 'It sounds really pretty'. Damn wapanese... This is why voting on anything is such a painfully dreadful idea when it actually gets acted on. Why decide based on most speakers, widest distribution or easiest to learn when you can just point at the pretty *facepalm*
 

Kejui

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Oct 22, 2010
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Kryzantine said:
Spoken language, Russian. Just highly versatile and allows for culture, scientific notation and everyday use, and adaptable to emotion change (as in, you could say the same statement angrily, matter-of-factly and romantically without sounding awkward in the slightest).

Written language, it'd be a ***** for everyone to learn Cryllic. Most Russian-Americans don't know how to read or write. Russia does have a 99.9% literacy rate, though, so I guess it'd be possible if you learned it since birth. In the meantime, we could still use the Latin alphabet. Something about written Chinese (and before anyone thinks of it, Mando and Canto have no changes in the written language) just sticks out to me. I don't know why, but I have a feeling it's a superior written language.
You're kidding, right? Mandarin and Cantonese have many changes in the written language. Why? The writing system was invented for the predecessor to Mandarin (Well at least the northern dialects [官話]), not Cantonese (A Yue language [粵語]). Sure, they started off in Old Chinese, but the divergence into Middle Chinese changed the usage of characters, mainly because of differences in pronunciation.

Also, the characters are more superior when they are traditional/complex characters (the ones used in Taiwan and Hong Kong), as opposed to the People's Republic of China. In general, this is because the characters in China have been simplified with sometimes little regard to meaning. In Taiwan and Hong Kong, characters still retain their meaning and contextual clues (the little bits that make up many words reveal meaning, where some don't exist anymore in simplified Chinese). It may be easier to memorize the smaller characters in China, but if you want meaning, then you'll have to go with traditional Chinese.

OT: Anyway, it's a difficult language family, Chinese, so I wouldn't see it as being good for a world language.

I chose French, mainly because the language is fairly expressive and at least pleasing to the ear. Also, a lot of the vocabulary remains the same from my native language, so it's not been that hard to learn to at least read it. Now, speaking it is a whole 'nother matter...eh, not too bad.
 

Warped_Ghost

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Sep 26, 2009
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I voted for german because i hear its easier to learn. Just wish they didn't have those male/female nouns and stuff.
 

capnpupster

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Jul 15, 2008
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French wouldn't really work, the spelling is a mess. Spanish isn't too bad, but the completely arbitrary way words are assigned gender throws it out of the running. Any form of Chinese is far too complicated for serious consideration. Spoken Japanese is actually quite simple and easy to learn, tone doesn't change words and grammatical structure isn't difficult to pick up. The only problem with Japanese as a global language is the use of Kanji, which makes reaching full literacy a time consuming endeavor. The real issue with Kanji, however, is the added difficulty in typing. I don't think Hindi is very widespread, but aside from that I don't know if it would be a very good choice, I doubt it would be though. Esperanto obviously doesn't work, or we'd all be using it already. Russian and German would seem to be front-runners to me, though I don't really know them that well.

So, Japanese if you're willing to simplify/restructure the writing system, or possibly German or Russian. I really don't think we'll have a global language until we actually unite under a single government.
 

David_G

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Aug 25, 2009
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For me, the easiest would be English, since it's practically my second language. Well, either that, or French, though I would like to learn German.
 

Kernow Chris

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Oct 28, 2010
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Kejui said:
Kryzantine said:
Spoken language, Russian. Just highly versatile and allows for culture, scientific notation and everyday use, and adaptable to emotion change (as in, you could say the same statement angrily, matter-of-factly and romantically without sounding awkward in the slightest).

Written language, it'd be a ***** for everyone to learn Cryllic. Most Russian-Americans don't know how to read or write. Russia does have a 99.9% literacy rate, though, so I guess it'd be possible if you learned it since birth. In the meantime, we could still use the Latin alphabet. Something about written Chinese (and before anyone thinks of it, Mando and Canto have no changes in the written language) just sticks out to me. I don't know why, but I have a feeling it's a superior written language.
You're kidding, right? Mandarin and Cantonese have many changes in the written language. Why? The writing system was invented for the predecessor to Mandarin (Well at least the northern dialects [官話]), not Cantonese (A Yue language [粵語]). Sure, they started off in Old Chinese, but the divergence into Middle Chinese changed the usage of characters, mainly because of differences in pronunciation.

Also, the characters are more superior when they are traditional/complex characters (the ones used in Taiwan and Hong Kong), as opposed to the People's Republic of China. In general, this is because the characters in China have been simplified with sometimes little regard to meaning. In Taiwan and Hong Kong, characters still retain their meaning and contextual clues (the little bits that make up many words reveal meaning, where some don't exist anymore in simplified Chinese). It may be easier to memorize the smaller characters in China, but if you want meaning, then you'll have to go with traditional Chinese.

OT: Anyway, it's a difficult language family, Chinese, so I wouldn't see it as being good for a world language.

I chose French, mainly because the language is fairly expressive and at least pleasing to the ear. Also, a lot of the vocabulary remains the same from my native language, so it's not been that hard to learn to at least read it. Now, speaking it is a whole 'nother matter...eh, not too bad.
But french is a language with so many irregularities in its grammar... je vais aller...j'irai... ugh lol and mandarin is also pleasing to the ear imho, and is nowhere near as hard to learn as people make out...

And back to chinese (mandarin) with simplified characters it has improved the literacy rate of mainland china by over 20% and i'm no good at maths but over 20% of 1.3billion is a big number... Yes you are right with the change of meaning in some mandarin words... the radical for meat in old chinese ÔÂ, which now, for example is used in ÐØ £¨chest£© ÄÔ £¨brain£© is actually the character for moon. There was a regard to meaning with the simplification, as the same simplification was applied to all simplified characters...

Although saying that it was envisioned in China that they would embrace a romanised form of Putonghua called Pinyin in the 60's and 70's...
 

Blydden

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Apr 4, 2010
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日本語はいいですよ!

(Loves the Japanese language. Is learning it.)
 

Exterminas

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Sep 22, 2009
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English, because it isn't my original language. Eliminating it from the poll negates any point this thread could possibly have, by showing wheather or not the majority of this community hails from english-speaking lands or not.