Will the US Become an "Officially" Bilingual Country?

B00Mer

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Will the US Become a Bilingual Country? Like Canada!!



The United States now the world’s second-largest Spanish-speaking community, after Mexico, according to the latest study by the Instituto Cervantes.

A total of 41 million native Spanish speakers live in the US, and there are also 11.6 million other bilingual speakers.
In Colombia and Spain, there are 48 and 46 million native Spanish and bilingual speakers, respectively.

Mexico has roughly as many as all three countries combined, with 121 million Spanish native speakers.

Of the states inside the US, New Mexico has 47 percent native Spanish speakers, while California and Texas both have 38 percent, and Arizona has 30 percent.


Texas principal who banned Spanish in mostly Hispanic school loses job

In New York, the population is about 18 percent native Spanish-speaking.

It has been predicted that the US will have as many as 128 million Spanish speakers by 2060 – about 30 percent of the population with Spanish as their mother tongue, according to a study by the US Census Office.

Worldwide, almost 470 million people have Spanish as their native language, while potential users (those who speak Spanish as their second language or a foreign language) are about 559 million, the Instituto Cervantes report, titled “Spanish, a living language,” says.

The Instituto Cervantes (Cervantes Institute) was founded in 1991 to promote the Spanish language and culture abroad, with 200,000 students registered for their language courses currently.

Globally, 21 million people learn Spanish as a foreign language, with learners in the US totaling about 7.8 million.

The Index of Human Development ranks Spanish it as the world’s second most important language, behind English, but ahead of Mandarin.

It also accounts for about 8 percent of Internet traffic, and is the third most widely used language online. On Facebook, it is the second most used language worldwide.

source: US now has more Spanish speakers than Spain ? research ? RT USA
 

Corduroy

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Or maybe Mexico will just take its northern territories back. Something to keep you up at night hiding behind your god and guns.
 

B00Mer

Make Canada Great Again
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The U.S. has no official language.

Yeah, but because of the influx of Hispanic immigrants for Mexico, South America and other countries, it's been considered. Seems some US Citizens do not like the changes they are seeing.

Personally, I think the Latin culture is strong and in some ways contributed to the "American Culture." Miami, NYC and Los Angeles have a strong Latino presence.

Ten Reasons to Make English the Official Language of the United States

At last, America has an official language (and yes, it's English) - Americas - World - The Independent
 

Machjo

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Not Anglais?

Nope. Only de facto.

The US should have a binding referendum to adopt one official written language of government administration into the Constitution. Just to make it fun, give them three options:

English (because it's dominant)
Esperanto (because it's easy to learn)
Elvish (a wild card to raise the stakes for the other two) :)
 

gopher

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As I mentioned here a long time ago, Spanish was the majority non-Native language in North America for the first 200+ years of the European conquest. In fact much of the Southwest and West have Spanish names such as Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, and Colorado. Spanish was also the majority language in Florida and part of Louisiana.
 

JLM

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Hope they think that one over carefully, once it's official then every document is going to have to be printed in two languages, probably at a cost of $billions. The ramifications are endless, food labels and God knows what!
 

Machjo

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Hope they think that one over carefully, once it's official then every document is going to have to be printed in two languages, probably at a cost of $billions. The ramifications are endless, food labels and God knows what!

One official language is always preferable.

cerrito means ''little hill'' in Spanish - given that the town's name is in that language it's no surprise

Cudos to them for being smart enough to adopt only one official language Texas also has only one official language: English, but obviously towns can have their own.
 

Machjo

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Canada could learn from its Southern neighbour here. Supposing each city could adopt the official language of government administration of its choice, but only one language, the same for each privince, and the same for the federal, you avoid translation costs while still respecting local linguistic differences.
 

Tecumsehsbones

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Mar 18, 2013
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Nope. Only de facto.

The US should have a binding referendum to adopt one official written language of government administration into the Constitution. Just to make it fun, give them three options:

English (because it's dominant)
Esperanto (because it's easy to learn)
Elvish (a wild card to raise the stakes for the other two) :)
What about Klingon?

Racist.