There were many lingua francas of which French was supposedly the first global lingua franca. That changed and it became English (from what I understand). We will probably see another language become the lingua franca, so my question is: should it be English? Are there better candidates out there? Why / why not?

  • tal@lemmy.today
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    10 days ago

    This seems like it might spur an elitist environment where only a small layer of Europeans (outside of the country from which the speakers of the official language originate) will generally be able to speak that language.

    Not your main point, but I watched an interview with some senior translator person at the EC, and they said that the EC very intentionally refrained from codifying a “Brussels English” over exactly this concern: that it would lead to official government documents being written in a form that the typical person in the EU would consider distant, have “Brussels elites that spoke differently”. The concern was that this would have negative political effects.

    Can’t recall the name of the guy, but IIRC he had a British accent. Was an older guy.

    Did drive home to me that there is a lot of political consideration taking place over policy decisions that I probably wouldn’t normally have expected.

    • Don Antonio Magino@feddit.nl
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      10 days ago

      That’s really interesting. Language is one of the main ways we distinguish ourselves (often subconciously). Designing a special Brussels English would likely make the ‘Brussels Elite’ more of a distinguishable ‘they’ indeed.