English Language Teaching - They Speak English as a First or Official Language Where?
English as a First or Official Language Often, when I teach or speak before of group of English language teachers, I like to ask the question, "How many countries are there which have English as a FIRST or OFFICIAL language?" A few minutes then pass as I wait for the group to "sweat it out".
By the way, how many of these countries can YOU name? Then, mercifully, I offer a response after taking an assortment of guesses ranging from half a dozen or so to fifteen or fifty.
The following countries each have English either as an official or first language.
In North America The North American continent, home to only three countries, has two of them with English as a first or official language.
o United States o Canada (for the record, French is also an official language in Canada) In Europe In Europe, one of the world's great melting pots, several countries claim English as a first or official language.
o Ireland o Scotland o England In the West Indies In the West Indies or Caribbean, formerly a virtual hotbed of colonization, several island nations have a form of spoken English.
o St.
Lucia o Cayman Islands o St.
Vincent o Grenadines o Bahamas o Bermuda o Grenada o St.
Nevis / St.
Kitts o Jamaica o Trinidad & Tobago o Barbados o U.
S.
Virgin Islands o British Virgin Islands In Central & South America If you though only Spanish is spoken "south of the border", you'd be wrong.
These countries use English as a first or official language.
o Guyana o Belize o Curacao In Asia Another great polyglot melting pot of the world with hundreds upon hundreds of languages dotting the nations that comprise the majority of the earth's population, English is claimed as an official or first language in these locations: o Singapore o Hong Kong o India o Philippines o Malaysia In Africa With more than a thousand languages covering the African continent, it seems nearly impossible to have any language emerge as a dominant one.
English has however, broken through as a "Lingua Franca" in several populous nations across the continent.
Here are some to date: o Sierra Leone o Liberia o Ghana o Zimbabwe o South Africa o Seychelles o Nigeria o Kenya In the South Pacific Itself a continent, Australia heads up a short though impressive list of English-speaking countries in the South Pacific.
G'day, mate! o Australia o Falkland Islands o New Zealand o Samoa Why Learn English? So when your English as a foreign language learners ask, "Why should I learn English?" you'll have some new ammunition with which to respond to them as an English language teaching professional.
By the way, how many of these countries can YOU name? Then, mercifully, I offer a response after taking an assortment of guesses ranging from half a dozen or so to fifteen or fifty.
The following countries each have English either as an official or first language.
In North America The North American continent, home to only three countries, has two of them with English as a first or official language.
o United States o Canada (for the record, French is also an official language in Canada) In Europe In Europe, one of the world's great melting pots, several countries claim English as a first or official language.
o Ireland o Scotland o England In the West Indies In the West Indies or Caribbean, formerly a virtual hotbed of colonization, several island nations have a form of spoken English.
o St.
Lucia o Cayman Islands o St.
Vincent o Grenadines o Bahamas o Bermuda o Grenada o St.
Nevis / St.
Kitts o Jamaica o Trinidad & Tobago o Barbados o U.
S.
Virgin Islands o British Virgin Islands In Central & South America If you though only Spanish is spoken "south of the border", you'd be wrong.
These countries use English as a first or official language.
o Guyana o Belize o Curacao In Asia Another great polyglot melting pot of the world with hundreds upon hundreds of languages dotting the nations that comprise the majority of the earth's population, English is claimed as an official or first language in these locations: o Singapore o Hong Kong o India o Philippines o Malaysia In Africa With more than a thousand languages covering the African continent, it seems nearly impossible to have any language emerge as a dominant one.
English has however, broken through as a "Lingua Franca" in several populous nations across the continent.
Here are some to date: o Sierra Leone o Liberia o Ghana o Zimbabwe o South Africa o Seychelles o Nigeria o Kenya In the South Pacific Itself a continent, Australia heads up a short though impressive list of English-speaking countries in the South Pacific.
G'day, mate! o Australia o Falkland Islands o New Zealand o Samoa Why Learn English? So when your English as a foreign language learners ask, "Why should I learn English?" you'll have some new ammunition with which to respond to them as an English language teaching professional.
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