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Word has it the English language is set to pass the one-million mark

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Published Date: 07 July 2008
THE English language – spoken by more than one billion people worldwide – will celebrate its one millionth word within a year, linguistic experts have revealed.
A new word is created every 98 minutes and the current number of official words stands at 995,844 with experts predicting the millionth word to arrive on 29 April, 2009. The latest word added to the language was 'e-Vampire', a noun describing electri
c equipment that consumes energy while in standby mode.

English has the most dominant position of any language and there are currently 1.35 billion people who speak it as their first, second or auxiliary language.

Paul Payack, founding president of the Global Language Monitor, says the amount of English speakers means there is an unprecedented amount of sources for new words to be developed.

The Global Language Monitor, made up of leading academics, wordsmiths and bibliophiles, analyses trends in word usage and choices and their impact on culture.

Mr Payack said: "English is different to most other languages in that it absorbs words like no other language in history. Language boils up from the people and we see this by the assimilation of words from 'hip hop', 'Hollywood' and 'Bollywood'.

"Our calculations now show there is a new word created every 98 minutes. You can never have too many words, it just means there are more possible ways to communicate. We should have the one millionth word on 29 April, 2009.

"But despite having a million words at our disposal it is unlikely that we will ever use more than just a tiny fraction of them. "The average persons vocabulary is fewer than 14,000 words out of these million that are available. A person who is linguistically gifted would only use 70,000 words."



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  • Last Updated: 06 July 2008 9:29 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Scullion,

Canada 07/07/2008 02:49:54
This of course means the coming of the one millionth word to be misspelled.
2

Guga II,

Rockall 07/07/2008 06:05:41
Or even the coming of the one millionth word to be mispronounced.
3

Douglas,

Bathgate 07/07/2008 08:05:42
Be nice if it was a replacement for 'iniquitous', 'television' or 'tax'. :o)
4

Guga II,

Rockall 07/07/2008 09:17:48
#3. How about "more theft by a useless government"?
5

Guga II,

Rockall 07/07/2008 09:18:56
#3 Or if you would prefer a new word to add to the list, how about "govtheft"?
6

The Batboy,

07/07/2008 09:41:24
#5 I prefer "govleech" to politician.

What does a "govleech" do? They soak up up public funds for no other apparent reason than to engorge themselves.

Self-immolation on the pyres public discovery is usual for them!
7

Schot,

07/07/2008 10:29:03
It is no surprise English has nearly a million words if you count 'e-Vampire'. Just sticking the letter 'e' to designate electronic was simply bad marketing of 'electronic commerce' and it does not make a new word just because some e-Jit says so.
8

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 07/07/2008 13:04:58
That just means that there will be misspellings and wrong usages of words of "the Queen's English" by many of the posters on these threads.

Doesn't anybody consult a dictionary before they post their meandering "thoughts" to these forums?
9

Schot,

07/07/2008 14:00:13
"That just means that there will be misspellings and wrong usages of words of "the Queen's English" by many of the posters on these threads."

Wrong usages ? Hahahahahahahha

Pythonesque.


TimW1234, Ottawa, Canada 21/06/2008 09:17:45
"Here in Canada the beaver is one of our national symbols and on one of our coins. THey cause much damage"

"Here in Canada the beaver is one of our national symbols and is on one of our coins. It causes much damage"

The rain in Spain falls mainly on the plain.
10

Schot,

07/07/2008 14:47:42
"Here in Canada beavers are one of our national symbols and are on one of our coins. They cause much damage"
11

Schot,

07/07/2008 14:53:01
French-Canadian are we ?
12

,

07/07/2008 16:26:31
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
13

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 07/07/2008 16:43:26
Schot

And your irrelevant point is ....

I am fluently bilingual and would you like to see me post in perfect French (le francais internationale) from now on?
14

Guga II,

Rockall 07/07/2008 17:50:57
#6. "Govleech". I like it.
15

ThePeter,

Glasgae 07/07/2008 18:08:07
TimW1234 - is Franglaise in the English dictionary?
16

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 07/07/2008 19:58:10
15 ThePeter

I would have to consult one of my 15 dictionaries to see if it is.

The Oxford Canadian Dictionary would probably have it since it is spoken so much here in Canada.

At least it is a tad better than "le jouale" spoken here by les Quebecois(e)s which is a very lowclass French that approximates Cockney as is spoken in London.
17

Brian Barker,

London 08/07/2008 20:47:35
How on earth can English become the future global language if everyone, throughout the world, needs to learn one million words!

Perhaps there is a case for Esperanto after all?

If you have time you might like to check http://www.lernu.net

 

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