Tuesday, December 3, 2019
Interlingua Is Doomed Essays - Interlingua, Constructed Languages
  Interlingua is Doomed         The dream of Interlingua-a common language that all the people of   the world speak-has long existed in many peoples minds. They and   their organizations have for many years tried to push this   through, but the odds are still against them.      The benefits of a common language on the planet are obvious,   language barriers would no longer exist, books and newspapers   could be printed in a single international edition distributed   worldwide. In order to achieve this however there are plenty of   obstacles along the way. The first question, which already throws   us into a major snag, is which language do we choose? To many of   us English is the obvious answer, since its expansion is enormous   an it is the closest thing to a common language we have today.   But this is where the Interlingua enthusiasts pull the brake   saying, no, it must be a new constructed language everyone learns   from scratch, because if we use an already existing natural   language, all its native speakers would form an elite. The fact   that the Interlingua enthusiasts normally excel in the very   constructed language they advocate does not seem to strike them   as unfair at all.      Not that the people of this planet have ever managed to fully   agree on anything, but let us just suppose that the world was to   reform and decide to teach its citizens an all new language. The   nations that would learn it the quickest would of course be the   industrialized countries with the resources for good public   education, incidentally the very nations that know and are   learning, the international business language-English      An inevitable fact is that the English language is already in the   process of taking over the world through film, TV, popular music   not to mention the Internet. Even more important, English being   the international business language there is a lot of money   invested in it and it therefore has the full support of the   commercial industry and right or wrong, money rules this world!      Were we still to miraculously manage to teach the whole planet   the very same language, another problem would become painfully   evident; maintaining it. All languages form local dialects, new   words and expressions, especially in isolated and remote   communities. Different people have different needs for words   dictated by their surroundings and their professions. Based on   the need of terminology the everyday vocabulary of a fisherman in   the North Atlantic is bound to be quite different from that of a   tobacco farmer in Turkey or a hot dog vendor in New York City. It   is hardly realistic to think that any organization or   international board of language would be able to map, keep track   of and set standards for every single entity in the world that   someone feels there is a need to have a word for.      We have not yet come close to teaching all the people of the   world to read and write their own native language that they are   exposed to every day. What makes us think that we can teach them   an all new language, especially with the economic interests of   the world opposing it.    
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