Linguistic demography

Linguistic demography is the statistical study of languages among all populations. Estimating the number of speakers of a given language is not straightforward, and various estimates may diverge considerably. This is first of all due to the question of defining "language" vs. "dialect". Identification of varieties as a single language or as distinct languages is often based on ethnic, cultural, or political considerations rather than mutual intelligibility. The second difficulty is multilingualism, complicating the definition of "native language". Finally, in many countries, insufficient census data add to the difficulties.

Demolinguistics is a branch of Sociology of language observing linguistic trends as affected by population distribution and redistribution and by the status of societies.

Most spoken languages

The following table compares the estimates of Comrie (1998) and Weber (1997)[1] (number of native speakers in millions). Also given are the estimates of SIL Ethnologue (2005). Comparing estimates that do not date to the same year is problematic due to the 1.14% per year growth of world population (with significant regional differences).

Comrie (1998) Weber (1997) SIL
1. Mandarin Chinese 836 1,100 1.205 (1999)
2.-4. Hindi+Urdu 333 250 422 (2001)[2]
Spanish 332 300 322 (1995)
English 322 300 309 (1984)
5.-6. Arabic 186 200 323 (2008)
Bengali 189 185 171 (1994)
7.-8. Russian 170 160 145 (2000)
Portuguese 170 160 178 (1995)
9. Japanese 125 125 122 (1985)
10. German 100 100 95.4 (1994)

This table shows that for the world's largest languages, it is impossible to give an estimate of the number of native speakers with a certainty better than 10% or so. Diverse but ethnically unified languages like Chinese and Arabic are particularly difficult to define, and estimates consequently show uncertainties of the order of 25%.

See also

Case studies:

Notes

  1. Bernard Comrie, Encarta Encyclopedia (1998); George Weber “Top Languages: The World’s 10 Most Influential Languages” in Language Today (Vol. 2, Dec 1997)
  2. "ethnic population"; SIL divides what is considered "Hindi" by other sources into numerous sub-languages. SIL's "Hindi" is Kharboli only.

Literature

External links