When I first visited HK in 78, NOBODY spoke Mandarin. I'd spent a couple of years in Taiwan practically living in the library trying to get the language down, and I come to HK thinking maybe I'll get a little respect from the locals, with the result that everybody treated me like I was some hopelessly clueless twit who didn't realize that Mandarin was the language of the dumb mainland yokels. It took me about 30 mins to realize that if I wanted anything, English was the way to go.
Now nearly everybody speaks some Mandarin; and if they don't they're embarrassed! And finally all that study has led to something - great sex with all these incredible mainland girls
So you see children, study hard now so that when you grow up you'll get somewhere important in life.
If Mandarin is becoming the educational priority for the HKers, that just reflects the new economic reality over here - it's not newly discovered love of the mother land.
20 yrs ago, in high school (grades 9-12) in the States, nobody studied Asian languages. Then Japanese became popular in the Universities and moved into the curriculum of rich kid prep schools. Now Mandarin is everywhere. It was inevitable; if it wasn't for unfortunate political decisions made by Chinese leaders from late Ching until Deng Xiaoping, Chinese would be an important world language by now.
What's happened to English is very interesting from a linguistic point of view. It's become so widespread that there is no standard English anymore; even syntax is breaking down into strange variants used in places like India, Nigeria, Singapore, Japan, etc. However, there is no credible threat to English as the world's dominant means of communication. English rules the media and the internet, and now that no culture exists in isolation from any other, English has become unstoppable.
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Last edited by Marsupial at 9-10-2007 13:13 ]