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India has more illiterates than anywhere in the world

You mean "Indian-English" speaking population, right?

Because English that these Indians speak, only the themselves can understand it.

Have first hand experience...

Indian's understand english and so it also reflects in our software industry which is now more than 100 billion dollar.By the way what was your problem as you people also understand english ?
 
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You mean "Indian-English" speaking population, right?

Because English that these Indians speak, only the themselves can understand it.

Have first hand experience...

There is nothing called 'proper English' now. If you're saying that proper English is the sort the british speak, you must be out of your mind. Even they can't understand their own dialects.
 
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why to bring china into this ?? still it's not a concern for you ?? you should focus on education of fellow indian Childrens, who cant afford or for other reason who doesn't get education..
indians fancy india is on par with china,which results in unbelievable obsession with china.
 
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You are trying to act dumb or naturally dumb ?

My point is, India has a large population, 1.2 billion, about a fifth of entire World's population. So, even a tiny percentage of the total population ranges in millions. There lies the fallacy of the article.

I hope you did not have any trouble in understanding my "Indian-English" ?

Seriously, ask anyone from UK, USA or elsewhere in the world what they have to go through when they call some Support Center, which is then re-routed to some call center in India.

I have seen myself those guys asking some other Indian (who could speak normal English) to interpret, what the guy on the other side was saying.

Not saying one should feel proud of speaking a foreign language, just mentioning a mere fact that Indian English is somewhat a different language altogether.
 
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Seriously, ask anyone from UK, USA or elsewhere in the world what they have to go through when they call some Support Center, which is then re-routed to some call center in India.

I have seen myself those guys asking some other Indian (who could speak normal English) to interpret, what the guy on the other side was saying.

Not saying one should feel proud of speaking a foreign language, just mentioning a mere fact that Indian English is somewhat a different language altogether.

Very good.. but am I talking about accents here ? I believe I have clarified it beyond any possible doubt, why I wrote my previous post. Why exactly are you dragging it ?
 
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Very good.. but am I talking about accents here ?

I think it is not just the accent, which would mean a slightly different pronunciation of the language, but how they completely change the sound of words, alphabets resulting in completely different meaning of a sentence.

Some examples: "V" is pronounced as "B", "Z" is pronounced as "J" or "G" and the list goes on.

It is very hard to understand Indian-English, really.
 
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What else can we expect from India, when their defence minister speaks of raising terrorists against terrorist and he is a graduate from IIT lol.
 
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I think it is not just the accent, which would mean a slightly different pronunciation of the language, but how they completely change the sound of words, alphabets resulting in completely different meaning of a sentence.

Some examples: "V" is pronounced as "B", "Z" is pronounced as "J" or "G" and the list goes on.

It is very hard to understand Indian-English, really.

How far the language benefited is the most concern than its accent. Highly skilled indian's are working in various countries including GCC,US etc in which pakistan could not utilize advantage of the language in which what indians achieved now.
 
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I think it is not just the accent, which would mean a slightly different pronunciation of the language, but how they completely change the sound of words, alphabets resulting in completely different meaning of a sentence.

Some examples: "V" is pronounced as "B", "Z" is pronounced as "J" or "G" and the list goes on.

It is very hard to understand Indian-English, really.

lol...What can I say, people will have to adapt to our version of English, perks of being a big population.

Then again, the accent differs widely across India. Now that I think about it, there are people from at least 15 different states in my office, some from North, some from South, some North-East guys and also from East and West. It's apparently a cacophony to an outsider to office, but we manage it quite fine, it's fun..
 
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India is home to the world’s largest population of illiterates. And part of the blame, according to a new study, may lie in the country’s preference for sons over daughters.

Despite education being offered as a fundamental right,more than 40%of India’s children drop out of elementary school—and the country has more than287 million illiterates, 37% of the global total. Moreover, 40% children are stunted in India, which means they don’t grow to their full potential because they don’t get the necessary resources.

Part of the blame lies in the cultural preference towards the male sex, according to Adriana Kugler of Georgetown University and Santosh Kumar of Sam Houston State University who authoredthe working paper, published by the American non-profit, National Bureau of Economic Research.

They come to these conclusions by analysing district-level household survey from 2007-08 to examine the impact on educational outcomes and the national family health survey from 2005-06 to examine the impact of family size on weight and height of young children. Both these surveys are among the most comprehensive surveys produced in the country.

One way in which this bias manifests is in families where, when the first born is a girl, parents will continue to have more children until they have a boy. Thus, in a society that prefers sons, the first child’s sex in India becomes an indicator whether or not a second child will be planned, and of the total number of children in the household. This, in turn, decides the size of the family.

This situation does not have much effect on children’s literacy or health in a rich family. There these “extra” children tend to receive at least the minimum amount of resources needed to survive and thrive. In lower caste, rural and poor households, however, the limited resources means that an extra child takes away some resources from all the children in the family.

An extra child in the family reduces schooling, on average, by 0.1 years. Furthermore, that extra child reduces the probability of ever attending or being enrolled in school by up to 2%. Both numbers may seem small, but for the size of India’s young population, the upshot is that millions don’t go to school enough or at all.

However, the impact of an extra child “in terms of reducing enrolment and attendance double and the impact of an extra child on years of schooling increase fourfold for illiterate and poor mothers, suggesting much larger gains from reducing family size in disadvantaged households,” according to the report.

Kugler and Kumar also looked at the effect on the health of children as families became larger. But they got mixed results on the impact it had had. However, Quartzrecently reportedthat another study by Northwestern University’s Seema Jayachandran and Harvard University’s Rohini Pande had clearly shown negative results.

The Indian first and eldest son tends to be taller than an African firstborn. If the eldest child of the family is a girl, and a son is born next, the son will still be taller in India than Africa.

For girls, however, the India-Africa height deficit is large. It is the largest for daughters with no older brothers, probably because repeated attempts to have a son takes a beating on the growth of the girls.

As is the case with any working paper, there is a chance that Kugler and Kumar’s finding may not withstand stronger scrutiny. However, Kugler remains confident. “We have done many robustness checks so the results are unlikely to change,” he told Quartz.

India has more illiterates than anywhere in the world—partly because of a preference for sons – Quartz
On the other hand... INdia has worlds second largest population of English speaking People...Beat that....
 
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indians fancy india is on par with china,which results in unbelievable obsession with china.

Oh that's why u people are giving salt to jet engines to pakistan, which u don't do on your other side of neighbour ! mmm unbelievable obsession
 
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What is exactly illiterate means? I mean Literate illiterate, illiterate literate, literate literate, illiterate illiterate etc...If one is intelligent one can get my point as to what I am trying to say. Mearly reading or writing does not make a man literate literally speaking!!
 
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Oh that's why u people are giving salt to jet engines to pakistan, which u don't do on your other side of neighbour ! mmm unbelievable obsession
grow up, the world doesnt revolve around india,as two soverity countries ,china has rights to be involved in pakisans military modernisation.

Oh that's why u people are giving salt to jet engines to pakistan, which u don't do on your other side of neighbour ! mmm unbelievable obsession
now russia is coming up to pakistan too, you should save your complaint for russia.
 
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grow up, the world doesnt revolve around india,as two soverity countries ,china has rights to be involved in pakisans military modernisation.

Yes world also does not revolve around china, grow up.
 
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