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by learc83
3246 days ago
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If Esperanto ever became the dominant international language people would start making blockbuster movies in it, kids would start learning it, and younger people in smaller countries would use it more than their native tongue. Then it would start to displace a few native languages until it became some community's native language. After that it would start to fragment and evolve and lose all the simplicity that comes from it being an artificial language. |
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600 years ago (before the printing press) most people lived either on or near their farm. You went to the nearby village for things you couldn't make on the farm. Traveling to the next village was as far as most people could go: they needed to get back to the farm to milk the cow again, or otherwise care for the farm. As such there was no way to know your language was fragmenting, much less any reason to care.
Today we have printing presses, telephone, TVs, movies. All give us ways to find out about fragmentation and reasons to care. While languages will still change and fragment over time, the above pressures will help to keep the changes in check.