That's native speakers. You'll probably find more of knows Chinese and Spanish speakers speak English compared to English speakers speaking Chinese or Spanish.rhizhim said:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_languages_by_number_of_native_speakers
Source: http://openlearn.open.ac.uk/mod/oucontent/view.php?id=402770§ion=6.1.2Indeed, the Welsh language experienced centuries of repression: Henry VIII banned Welsh from all official usage in Wales with the Act of Union in 1536. In subsequent centuries, the language was systematically stigmatised, most famously in the 1847 Report into the State of Education in Wales, which pronounced the language a ?great evil?, holding it responsible for the supposed economic and moral degeneracy of the Welsh people (Roberts, 1998). This report, also referred to as ?Brad y Llyfrau Gleision? or ?The Treachery of the Blue Books?, was prepared by three English barristers, none of whom could speak or understand Welsh. Possibly the most devastating action against the Welsh language was forbidding its use in schools, a prohibition that continued into the early twentieth century.
What the hell is a chip muffin? You Lancastrians are weird!Nadia Castle said:(I'm a Lancastrian and feel pained when chippys don't get me asking them for a chip muffin)
As much as I disagree with the way Irish is taught in schools I don't think it should be allowed to die out. Not that it will for some time, given how attached many people are to it. I'm not a huge nationalist but our language is a significant part of our history and our heritage.Nadia Castle said:Maybe its just because I'm English but I always find desperation to hold onto dying languages a bit pathetic. In Ireland tons of government meetings have to be read out twice, once in English that everyone understands, then in Gaelic even though less than 2 in 10 people there speak it fluently. Languages are never sacred, go back 100 years in any country and you'd be hard pressed to understand what people are saying. Keeping the odd word for nostalgia or cultural reasons is fine (I'm a Lancastrian and feel pained when chippys don't get me asking them for a chip muffin) but literally keeping a language on life support just to feel different in the globalized world is a massive waste of time and effort.