Can We Save The World's Dying Language Analysis

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Does it matter whether a seemingly obscure language spoken by a few people in an isolated corner of the world goes out of existence?

The last speaker died, is how the story began. Not long ago, after having an epic battle with the Bokmal, the Nynorsk was sent to the infinite oblivion. Norwegian population preferred to adapt the Bokmal to their modern lifestyle. Throughout history, languages have been victimized by malevolous political, social and economic forces. These dominant factors can reach languages at any hidden corner of the world and damage them until they go out of existence. According to Gaici Vince’s article, Can We Save the World’s Dying Languages? 7000 languages will die by the end of the 21st century, which means two vernaculars …show more content…

Losing variation of tongues, vocabulary and grammatical systems decreases multilingualism because people are less forced to speak another vernacular. In other words, we lose unique sounds and words developed by humans after years of evolution, when languages extinguish. If they keep disappearing, humans will be forced to speak the same vernacular and the advantages of learning another dialect will get lost. Some experiments have proved that learning another language increases speakers’ communication skills. The internal parietal cortex area of the brain becomes denser when the speaker increases its capability to process information in various languages. Another point is that by learning another vernacular, it's expected for the speaker to gain a different interpretation of life. According to the New York Time Article Why Save a Language? “Yeli Dnye… has 11 different ways to say “on” depending on whether something is horizontal, vertical, on a point, scattered, attached and more…” (McWhortery, 2014, 2). Yeli speakers can relate the same word in 11 different ways because they have a broader vocabulary. Every language gives a unique pathway of thought to its speaker and has exceptional attributes. If a language vanishes before the world sees it or records it, then a small piece of humanity’s heritage

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