Expert: New 'must learn' language likely to be Mandarin
Share of people who are native English speakers declining
WASHINGTON
(AP) --
The world faces a future of people speaking more than one
language, with English no longer seen as likely to become dominant, a British
language expert says in a new analysis.
"English
is likely to remain one of the world's most important languages for the
foreseeable future, but its future is more problematic -- and complex -- than
most people appreciate," said language researcher David Graddol.
He sees English
as likely to become the "first among equals" rather than having the
global field to itself.
"Monolingual
speakers of any variety of English -- American or British -- will experience
increasing difficulty in employment and political life, and are likely to
become bewildered by many aspects of society and culture around them," Graddol said.
The share of
the world's population that speaks English as a native language is falling, Graddol reports in a paper in Friday's issue of the journal
Science.
The idea of
English becoming the world language to the exclusion of others "is past
its sell-by date," Graddol says. Instead, its
major contribution will be in creating new generations of bilingual and
multilingual speakers, he reports.
A multi-lingual
population is already the case in much of the world and is becoming more common
in the
And that
linguistic diversity, in turn, has helped spark calls to make English the
nation's official language.
Yale linguist
Stephen Anderson noted that multilingualism is "more or less the natural
state. In most of the world multilingualism is the normal condition of
people."
"The
notion that English shouldn't, needn't and probably
won't displace local languages seems natural to me," he said in a
telephone interview.
While it is
important to learn English, he added, politicians and educators need to realize
that doesn't mean abandoning the native language.
Graddol, of the British consulting and publishing business The
English Company, anticipates a world where the share of people who are native
English speakers slips from 9 percent in the mid-twentieth century to 5 percent
in 2050.
As of 1995, he
reports, English was the second most-common native tongue in the world,
trailing only Chinese.
By 2050, he
says, Chinese will continue its predominance, with Hindi-Urdu of
Even as it
grows as a second language, English may still not ever be the most widely
spoken language in the world, according to Graddol,
since so many people are native Chinese speakers and many more are learning it
as a second language.
English has
become the dominant language of science, with an estimated 80 percent to 90
percent of papers in scientific journals written in English, notes Scott
Montgomery in a separate paper in the same issue of Science. That's up from
about 60 percent in the 1980s, he observes.
"There is
a distinct consciousness in many countries, both developed and developing,
about this dominance of English. There is some evidence of resistance to it, a
desire to change it,"
For example, he
said, in the early years of the Internet it was dominated by sites in English,
but in recent years there has been a proliferation of non-English sites,
especially Spanish, German, French, Japanese and others.
Nonetheless,
English is strong as a second language, and teaching it has become a growth
industry, said Montgomery, a Seattle-based geologist and energy consultant.
Graddol noted, though that employers in parts of
"The
world's language system, having evolved over centuries, has reached a point of
crisis and is rapidly restructuring," Graddol
says. In this process as many as 90 percent of the 6,000 or so languages spoken
around the world may be doomed to extinction, he estimated.
Graddol does have words of consolation for those who struggle to
master the intricacies of other languages.
"The
expectation that someone should always aspire to native speaker competence when
learning a foreign language is under challenge," he comments.
http://edition.cnn.com/2004/TECH/science/02/27/future.language.ap/index.html