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Will English kill off India's languages?

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Whether the government, the private sector or NGOs should deliver development is a question which will not have much relevance unless India's wealth continues to grow to pay for that development.

English is one of the advantages India has which are said to be propelling it to economic superpower status.

There are all those Indians who speak excellent English. It's the mother tongue of the elite and effectively the official language of the central government. Then there is the growing number of parents who now aspire to give their children an education through the medium of that language. But is the craze for English an unmixed blessing?

Back in the sixties the British regarded Indian English as something of a joke. The comic actor Peter Sellers had mocked it so comprehensively that I found it well nigh impossible to get the BBC to allow anyone with even the faintest Indian accent on the air.

In India, we native English speakers laughed at quaint phrases like "please do the necessary and oblige", or more simply "please do the needful", and "it is suggested that the meeting be preponed", which appeared regularly in Indian official correspondence.

Feted writers

A senior British diplomat once suggested that his PA should find some less geographically specific way of answering the telephone when he couldn't take the call than saying, "Sahib is not on his seat". Much to the diplomat's dismay a colleague told him that his PA had misunderstood the instruction and been even more specific. He'd told the colleague, "Sahib is in the lavatory."

Now with Indian writers carrying off the major literary awards, and Westerners in the IT and BPO industries talking of being "bangalored" when they are replaced by English-speaking Indians, Indian English is anything but a joke.

But could the very success of English in India "bangalore" India's own languages?

The linguist Professor David Crystal speaking in Delhi said: "A language is dying every two weeks somewhere in the world today. Half the world's languages will no longer be spoken in another century. This is an extremely serious concern, and English has to share the blame." Others put it less politely, describing English as a killer language.

But should India worry if English kills off some of its 22 officially recognised and hundreds of its not-so-official languages?

Perhaps the answer is no
.

In his book comparing the future of India, China, and Japan, the former editor of The Economist, Bill Emmott, said India fell short of China in almost every measure except the ability to speak English.

So why shouldn't India build on its one advantage? One practical reason is because, looking back over the history of India since it became independent in 1947, it is clear that any threat to Indian languages has the potential to provoke a violent backlash
.

BBC News - Will English kill off India's languages?
 
I dont knw abt other indian languages,Tamil ll die but slowly than others,that am sure of.
 
Andhra Pradesh recently has taken the decision to change the medium of instruction to English at all public schools. But I doubt that would kill Telugu language. May be in 100 years or so.
 
I dont knw abt other indian languages,Tamil ll die but slowly than others,that am sure of.

kya subbu :what:????? but from when actually oir chinese members developd such a great love & respect for BBC :cheesy:& concern for owr languages :hitwall::hitwall:do you really think after having a culture & geopolitics like what we have all the languages will die:no: thanks to english:azn:
 
That's the reality of globalization.

Other language might still exist, but everyone will know how to speak English one day.

English is after all, the language of the internet and computers.
 
The former editor of The Economist, Bill Emmott, said India fell short of China in almost every measure except the ability to speak English.

So why shouldn't India build on its one advantage?
.

BBC News - Will English kill off India's languages?

LOL.... :lol:

It's the mother tongue of the elite and effectively the official language of the central government.

English is the de-facto official language of India's Central Government?

Seriously?
 
kya subbu :what:????? but from when actually oir chinese members developd such a great love & respect for BBC :cheesy:& concern for owr languages :hitwall::hitwall:do you really think after having a culture & geopolitics like what we have all the languages will die:no: thanks to english:azn:

I'm sure Indian languages will not die because of English. They'll just die because of emoticons.
 
The base of other languages is way too strong for English to ride them over.

English is a common medium of communication across the country thats all.
 
LOL.... :lol:



English is the de-facto official language of India's Central Government?

Seriously?

English is the language of business and governance at central level in India. Each state tend to do the same tasks through the mixture of English and local language.

India is not China, where they mandate to study in Mandarin (or whatever).:lol: Indians are for the most part multilingual. Every educated Indian speaks at least 2-3 languages.
 
That's the reality of globalization.

Other language might still exist, but everyone will know how to speak English one day.

English is after all, the language of the internet and computers.
Rizwaan Bhai !!!indian society is very-very complex for you to understand , no hard feelings but most of the indian languages like Hindi, Bangla ,Tamil , Telegu, Kannad , Malyaalam ect are spoken as every day language & is mother tounge of vaugely 20-400 million people depending on many complex factors & just because of trade & computers there relevence is not going to finnish at least in recent future 50-100 odd years , Thanks .
 
the language of India's bureaucracy is the language of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar(Which they claims to be National Language/Official languge etc and which is not). English has miserably failed with them. :P
 
I don't know about other languages but my language Punjabi will surely survive. We Punjabis love our language
 
Its not going to kill anything. More people will become bilingual. Thats all.

I am trilingual as is most of the educated Keralites with a little bit of Arabic thrown in.
 
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