▲ | permo-w 12 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||
this is horseshit. Canada, the US and the UK alone have - minimum - 400 million. Australia has 25 million, Ireland 5, New Zealand 5, then there's the Anglophone African nations, plus a lot of the Carribbean. Nigeria on its own likely has 100 million native speakers of English | |||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | InsideOutSanta 12 hours ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||
As I've said, you can't just sum up populations. About 20% of the US population are immigrants. A lot of them won't speak English as their native language. Only about 60 million Nigerians speak English. Hausa is the most commonly spoken native language. Just because English is the official language doesn't mean that it's people's native language. I'm not just making stuff up. The 400 million number is from The Ethnologue, a source which linguists generally consider as reliable. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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▲ | bilbo0s 11 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Have you been to Nigeria? Not all Nigerians can speak English. But there are a lot who can. It honestly felt about 50/50 to me. And I see some other commenters saying that 60 million Nigerians have some ability to speak it. (But you need to think of that like if I was to say 60 million Americans have some ability to speak Spanish.) However, even for those with some facility with English,I don't know that I'd classify it as their native language. |