Another Proof that Spanish Speaking World is Shrinking

latino   Sat May 01, 2010 5:14 pm GMT
!acongojados nos teneis!

despues de vuestras exposiciones y saber "esta verdad".Todo el mundo se esta pasando al globish pero "renegando del español":

- En Madrid se han agotado los libros de francés.

- En España , Mexico ,Argentina ..etc. no podemos mandar a nuestros niños a intercambios linguísticos porque "a nadie le interesa el español".

- En USA nadie quiere hablar español, ni asistir a colegios bilingues.

- En Belice pegan al que se le escapa una palabra en español por latino.

- En Canada estan cerrando los Institutos Cervantes para transformarlos en bilingues ingles/quebequá.

- En los "coleges" ingleses se niegan a dar español.

- en Brasil sobran profesores de español y los niños se resisten a ir a los colegios.

- Los franceses que vienen a España se niegan a aprender español.

- Los chinos que veo en España para aprender español "son una una ilusión".

- El que en Madrid, Salamanca, Malaga etc. esten llenas de gente pagando para estudiar español "es propaganda latina".

- Los latinos hemos perdido nuestra autoestima al oiros y nos avergonzamos de serlo.


Gracias maestros , o...

¿SERÁ TODO AL CONTRARIO?


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5_Iel-u709A


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mjf02qDAS9I


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-WF46Cr51ks



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yr-dcZZ3amw


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f_JXc1Yoh70

Quien no va a estar contento en este club tan “humano” abierto a todo y encima disponemos de esta arma tan poderosa:

http://libertadlinguistica.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=42&Itemid=2
Homme Fatal   Sun May 02, 2010 12:16 am GMT
<< When proof means "information that proves something" it is *always* an uncountable noun, so you cannot say "a proof" and much less "another proof". The correct usage is "more proof" - NOT pluralized. If you don't believe me, search "more proof" in google and you'll see thousands of headlines with this usage.

...and no, the definite article is not optional in that sentence; you absolutely have to say *the* Spanish-speaking world.

I'm not going to argue about it anymore seeing that you are stubbornly determined to continue writing/speaking broken English like a typical ignorant foreigner. So I'll leave you to it. >>

You can't fool me because I know form the very beginning that you're a pseudo English speaker but a hispanic who's fond of criticizing others and looking for loopholes.

It would be very fine if you wouldn't argue with me.

I repeat, ther are cases that the definite article can be omitted in the English language unlike in your Spanish that it would render the sence grammatically incorrect.

You're not really a native English speaker. Why would you write "spanish -speaking instead of "Spanish-speaking"? In your language it's wrong to write "El idioma Español" with capital "E". Now that shows that you're really hispanic.

"When proof means "information that proves something" it is *always* an uncountable noun, so you cannot say "a proof" and much less "another proof". The correct usage is "more proof" - NOT pluralized. If you don't believe me, search "more proof" in google and you'll see thousands of headlines with this usage. "

It looks like that you're the one who's stubborn because I've been telling you that you cannot use "more" with UNCOUNTABLE nouns the correct ones should be "much" and "few".

Goodness, you're insisting that "proof" is uncountable noun and yet you don't know what adjective are you gonna use to describe it.
Semanario de Filipinas   Sun May 02, 2010 3:30 am GMT
As of 2010[update], 329 to 358 million people speak Spanish as a native language and a total of 417 million people speak it worldwide. It is the second most natively-spoken language in the world, ahead of English.
Semanaire de Vietnam   Sun May 02, 2010 7:52 am GMT
<< As of 2010[update], 329 to 358 million people speak Spanish as a native language and a total of 417 million people speak it worldwide. It is the second most natively-spoken language in the world, ahead of English. >>

Hndi has the second largest number of speakers and next is English.

You really believe the erroneous study conducted by Ethnologue.