ABSTRACT

How many languages are there in the world? What language(s) do they speak in India? What languages have the most speakers? What languages were spoken in Australia, or in Mexico before European immigration? When did Latin stop being spoken, and when did French start being spoken? How did English become such an important world language? These and other similar questions are often asked by the interested layman. One aim of this volume – taking the Introduction and the individual chapters together – is to provide answers to these and related questions, or in certain cases to show why the questions cannot be answered as they stand. The chapters concentrate on an individual language or group of languages, and in this Introduction I want rather to present a linking essay which will provide a background against which the individual chapters can be appreciated. After discussing some preliminary notions in Section 1, Section 2 of the Introduction

provides a rapid survey of the languages spoken in the world today, concentrating on those not treated in the subsequent chapters, so that the reader can gain an overall impression of the extent of linguistic diversity that characterises the world in which we live. Since the notion of ‘major language’ is primarily a social notion – languages become major (such as English) or stop being major (such as Sumerian) not because of their grammatical structure, but because of social factors – Section 3 discusses some important sociolinguistic notions, in particular concerning the social interaction of languages.

1.1 How Many Languages?