- 26 May 08, 07:13#45041
That's a very good point you're raising: Chinese. I think however, that the Chinese will have to adapt to English (and they do so anyway) because all their trading partners are already tracked for English, so I doubt they could and even wanted to start a new trend, especially since Chinese is a rather difficult language with its structure of different intonations that change the meaning of a word so completely. Besides their written language is not very computer friendly either
Le coeur a ses raisons que la raison ne connaît point. 
I completely disagree with you: Esperanto is a still-born artificial language nobody considers seriously to learn over English. Not only that, it is elitist and discriminatory when you think about it: poor people will never have a chance to learn it, but they can easily pick up some English.
Esperanto is as dead as Latin and so it should remain. RIP.
and do suggest Esperanto is a good international language well try telling that to Asian or Arab speaking nations! its easy for Europeans speakers to pick up as they use the Roman alphabet or versions of.
and i think what makes a language international will be the language of big corporations and big business. atm English is the language to know in this case but Chinese would be a useful language to learn for the coming future especially if they do become the global economical power over the US
That's a very good point you're raising: Chinese. I think however, that the Chinese will have to adapt to English (and they do so anyway) because all their trading partners are already tracked for English, so I doubt they could and even wanted to start a new trend, especially since Chinese is a rather difficult language with its structure of different intonations that change the meaning of a word so completely. Besides their written language is not very computer friendly either


