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Do people in India speak English to each other?

Do people in India speak English to each other?

Amid this Babel, English remains the country’s only lingua franca. India now claims to be the world’s second-largest English-speaking country. The most reliable estimate is around 10\% of its population or 125 million people, second only to the US and expected to quadruple in the next decade.

Does everyone in India speak the same language?

Most Indians speak a language belonging to the families of the Indo-Aryan branch of Indo-European (c. 77\%), the Dravidian (c. 20.61\%), the Austroasiatic (Munda) (c. 1.2\%), or the Sino-Tibetan (c. 0.8\%), with some languages of the Himalayas still unclassified. The SIL Ethnologue lists 415 living languages for India.

How many English speakers are there in India?

English speakers in India English is only spoken as a first language by approximately 220,000 people in India, but about 125 million people claim to speak English as a second language (or even third). This figure would not be surprising given that multilingualism is pretty common in the country.

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Why are there so many teachers in India who can’t speak English?

Curiously, many states in India have attempted to make English the medium of instruction for all schools in an attempt to assuage the demands of the poor; however, the shortage of teachers who can even speak English is surreal. All of this while the vast majority is able to communicate in their respective mother tongues.

Why is English so popular in India?

It is mainly because of India’s strong regionalism that English remains so used today, Arunachal Pradesh and Nagaland even listing English as their only official language. Higher education, most national and international businesses, as well as certain parts of the Indian government, continue to use English as their primary language.

Is India’s prosperity dependent on learning English?

It remains that Indians have come to believe that their nation’s prosperity, as well as their own, is wholly dependent upon not just learning English, but exclusively learning it as a first language.