Chinese-Dragon
RETIRED TTA
- Joined
- Jul 9, 2010
- Messages
- 33,932
- Reaction score
- 52
- Country
- Location
Most major countries have a de facto national language.
In America and Britain it is English (even though a large percentage of their populations are not native English speakers), in Germany it is German, in Japan it is Japanese.
Do you think Germans originally spoke the same language, a few hundred years ago? No, they were many different tribes with many different languages.
But as long as the de facto language is a native language, I don't see any reason why it should erode "cultural heritage" or anything like that.
I'm a native Cantonese speaker, but I learned Mandarin when I was young because that's the best way to communicate with other Chinese people. It's a common Chinese language, which reinforces Chinese culture rather than weakening it.
In America and Britain it is English (even though a large percentage of their populations are not native English speakers), in Germany it is German, in Japan it is Japanese.
Do you think Germans originally spoke the same language, a few hundred years ago? No, they were many different tribes with many different languages.
But as long as the de facto language is a native language, I don't see any reason why it should erode "cultural heritage" or anything like that.
I'm a native Cantonese speaker, but I learned Mandarin when I was young because that's the best way to communicate with other Chinese people. It's a common Chinese language, which reinforces Chinese culture rather than weakening it.