holy king
Deity
i guess it just was not taught.
private schools were almost certainly forbidden, so there you go.
private schools were almost certainly forbidden, so there you go.
English and German were forbidden in schools?
why is catalan 1% native, 2 % overall?
also, the gaelic languages are missing...
In that time did any serious aspect of their every day life require them to talk to anyone who didn't speak Slovak? No.
Today, how resticted is someone who only speaks Slovak as far as internet usage? This site is a case in point, truely international boards/website are going to use an international language just like this one, and people who want access to them are going to have to learn one of those languages.
Every year the influence of things like the internet will grow, and our need for common communication methods for more and more basic needs will grow with it.
But come on Winner, isn't English so much easier and prettier than Czech?
c![]()
There's a lot of people in the Catalan countries for whom Catalan is not their first language, but they do understand and speak some of it. You cannot underestimate how much the high intelligibility between Catalan and Spanish or French helps with the language's prosperity and proliferation.
Even in Catalonia itself, some degree of bilingualism is the norm (newish migrants aside) and the Catalan and Spanish speaking communities are roughly the same size, if you go by the polls about which language people prefer to use. Gangleri can probably speak more about this, but you'd find that in reality there's both a lot of bad Spanish-ised Catalan and Catalan-ised Spanish spoken in Barcelona.
The only thing I cannot understand from that list is why Slovak is in the same situation of Catalan. Any idea?
One global language would be fantastic...
That's why is hard to say when does the native community ends and those who speak it as a second language begins: because there's in fact no difference between both.
That's a scary idea. Something like "one global race would be fantastic" or "one global religion would be fantastic."
Well it depends whether you mean "global lingua franca" or "all languages replaced by one".
One more thing - during the Hapsburg times, knowing German was actually much more important than knowing English today. I can get 90% of jobs here in Czech Rep. without knowing a single word in English. In the 19th century, if you wanted to do anything else than menial labour, you had to speak German. Yet, Czech didn't die. It evolved, reformed and reasserted itself during the period we now call "the National Revival".
My gut reaction: among people who speak both languages fluently, the line is self-identification and hence somewhat political?
different spellings for proper nouns?
aparently you didnt even learn how to spell habsburg.![]()