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#41
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#42
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Robert M. Gary wrote:
Actually in my travels around the world on business I've never found a country where I couldn't find an English speaker. All you need to do is find someone under the age of 15. I would guess that 75% of the world's population under the age of 15 speaks some English (especially in Asia ,South America, and Europe). In parts of the US, you wouldn't be able to find 75 percent of the population under 15 speaking English. If you believe that 75 percent of the world's population under 15 speak English, you haven't traveled enough. |
#43
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Spehro Pefhany writes:
Are you sure he wasn't a Chinese pirate? There was no reason to believe that he might be a pirate. |
#44
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JohnT writes:
But you haven't been further than La Défense in the past 2 years except in Flight Simulator. I haven't been to Mount Everest, but I know it's a tough mountain to climb. That's one of the consequences of education. |
#45
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El Maximo writes:
How about those 1040 instructions printed in Spanish, or did you forget to file (again)? The United States is also only a small fraction of the world, and it has an obsession with political correctness and a substantial minority of Spanish speakers that most nations do not share. The odd thing is that most people in the U.S. who can speak only Spanish are illiterate in both English _and_ Spanish. |
#46
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Dallas writes:
Tell ya what... Why don't you make a list of all the foreign countries you've been to and I'll respond with a list of my own and we'll see who's got the widest world view. I spoke of the world; you countered with an observation concerning the city of Dallas. |
#47
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NotABushSupporter writes:
In parts of the US, you wouldn't be able to find 75 percent of the population under 15 speaking English. Many countries understand the utility of English better than the United States does. If you believe that 75 percent of the world's population under 15 speak English, you haven't traveled enough. I'll agree that this is quite an exaggeration. Most of the world's population does not speak English. However, English is more widely spoken than any other language. |
#48
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C J Campbell writes:
The Chinese are studying English by the millions. So that would come out to, what, 0.4%? People can study a language for years without learning it. It depends on motivation, quality of education, and other factors. In much of the world people study English for years but never become competent in the language. In Europe, France has some of the worst English instruction, although all the Latin countries of Europe are very poor in English. It is a mistake to think that the things that are done on behalf of an American cultural minority mean that America is going to change to Spanish. Even less so for the entire rest of the world. English is rapidly becoming the universal language of the world. Declare yourself an English teacher and you can get a job practically anywhere in Asia, the Middle East, Africa, or even South America. Quite so. English is now favored simply because so many people already speak it, and even two people who have different, non-English native languages will generally choose to communicate in English rather than try to learn each other's language. Spanish is mostly geographically limited to parts of the Americas (keeping Brazil in mind), which does not make it useful in most of the world. |
#49
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A Guy Called Tyketto writes:
Plus, Anthony, 4 words. Common. Traffic. Advisory. Frequency. CTAF is not ATC. |
#50
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C J Campbell writes:
You see that all over Asia. People who supposedly speak the same dialect who cannot understand each other, so they speak English. English has become what Esperanto was intended to be. Chinese is a special case because the spoken versions of Chinese are mutually incomprehensible; they are completely different. At the same time, the written versions are generally coherent. So one Chinese person may have no idea what another Chinese person is saying, but he will immediately understand if they communicate in writing on a piece of paper. This is a consequence of the Chinese use of symbols for concepts in the written language, rather than symbols for sounds. The written language provides almost no clue to pronunciation, and so pronunciation drifts until the spoken languages become completely separated. It's also one reason why Chinese is not likely to ever become a universal language. |
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