Etiqueta: language diversity

  • Language diversity is akin to biodiversity, an indicator of social wellbeing

    Language diversity is akin to biodiversity, an indicator of social wellbeing, but some of Europe’s languages are falling into disuse. Breton, for example, is dying out because its speakers are dying, and keeping languages alive among young people is challenging in an increasingly monolingual digital world.

    Catalan, which is spoken by about 10 million people, is the poster child of successful minoritised languages. Thanks to decades of linguistic immersion in public education, from nursery to university, about 93.4% of the population can speak or understand Catalan, in addition to Spanish. Both are co-official languages in Catalonia, and the result is a culture that is almost completely and unselfconsciously bilingual.

  • Why Languages Change

    Why Languages Change

    Languages change because they adapt to new cultural, social, and technological realities, and because human cognition naturally reshapes vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation over time. Borrowing, random variation, and everyday phonetic simplification all contribute to this ongoing evolution, making linguistic change both inevitable and essential.