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by danmaz74
3607 days ago
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Yes we could also create N! districts, where N is the number of languages spoken in the EU... On a more practical level, I and my wife already speak English fluently, I have two remote teams composed with people from three different nations with whom I speak English, and having to learn eg German would make me need to use 3 different languages (4 for my wife, who is Russian). Seriously, the only shot we have at a European lingua franca at the moment is English. Well, maybe I'll just have to move to Ireland or Canada if I actually move. |
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If we look at the language knowledge in the EU
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Languages_of_the_European_Unio...
51% knowledge for English is far from a lingua franca in Europe. At least German (32%) and French (26%) are also very common to know. In this sense you shouldn't think that there is some European lingua franca, but rather a small set of languages which has the property that if you know them, the probability is high that you will be understood.