Our language, our problem
2007-11-14
English is so pervasive that native speakers have lost control of
it. Who are they to tell Pavel Flosman that his Czech retail chain
is doomed to fail if he insists on calling it Flop? Who are native
speakers to tell ÈSA that its low-cost unit, Click4Sky, doesn't
make a lot of sense, unless it hopes to pique the interest of
Rupert Murdoch? What about i-legalne.cz, a legitimate music-
download site that gives the opposite impression in the
anglicized global environment? It doesn't matter what native
speakers think, because they're the minority and no longer set
the rules. HN confirmed this in today's edition. It corrected
several minor errors in an English test from Oct. 8 but left the
biggest blooper. "This is not right moment to ask for my help,"
the text ran. A native speaker might say the same thing when
asked to edit some Czenglish, except that he or she would
surely violate local usage and insert a definite article.
[Czech Republic Sky Channel Hospodáøské noviny]
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