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Re: [lojban] Oblique Strategies
John Cowan writes:
> After a little research, I discovered that the half- dozen most
> widely spoken languages, together, were known to more than half
> of the world's population. (It's interesting to try to guess
> what these languages are; the mistakes in our guessing tell us a
> lot about our cultural and geographic myopia. The top half-dozen
> languages: Mandarin Chinese, English, Hindi, Spanish, Russian
> and Arabic. Among people I've talked to, most of their missed
> guesses appear in the second half-dozen: Japanese, French,
> German, Portuguese, Bengali, and Malay. Score six for Europe,
> five for Asia -- including two in India; and Malay which almost
> no Westerner would guess -- and one for Arabia. None for highly
> balkanized Africa.)
>
>It seems to me that the source of this listing has to be Lojban,
>since the exact order of languages depends on what your source is
and how you count 2nd-language speakers (we reckon them as half
>a speaker). The grouping into Top Six and Second Six is also
>plainly Lojbanic: TLI Loglan has a Top Eight instead.
Interesting. I dug a bit myself, and found that the Ethnologue has a
_very_ different order: http://www.sil.org/ethnologue/top100.html. I
can't find the site I used to use, which was much more nicely laid out.
-Robin
--
http://www.csclub.uwaterloo.ca/~rlpowell/ BTW, I'm male, honest.
Despite not getting very emotional about it, the fact that quantum
entanglement doesn't allow transmission of information is probably the
most profound dissapointment I've ever experienced. -- RLPowell