<font><font face="georgia,serif">Another Kind of Extinction<br><br>By PAUL C. CASTRIGANO<br>Published: Wednesday, May 02, 2012<br>US<br><br>How many of the world’s languages can you name? No, seriously, try it out. Take out a piece of paper and just write until your brain cannot produce another language. My guess is that you have about twenty or thirty languages, maximum, and most of those came from taking country names and adding the appropriate suffix. If you named thirty, then congratulations: That’s a staggering 0.4 percent of the world’s nearly 7,000 languages.<br>
<br>Human communication and language is a wondrous achievement. Unfortunately, many of these languages are dying out, due mainly to globalization and the worldwide reduction to fewer and fewer linguae francae. In fact, within a century, more than half of the world’s 7,000 languages are likely to be extinct, and once a language is gone, there is no way to bring it back completely. Language extinction poses a grave cultural threat to our species, and we should take far stronger stances and measures for ensuring their preservation.<br>
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