首页
登录
职称英语
(1)Under the 1996 constitution, all 11 of South Africa’s official languages "
(1)Under the 1996 constitution, all 11 of South Africa’s official languages "
游客
2024-11-11
25
管理
问题
(1)Under the 1996 constitution, all 11 of South Africa’s official languages "must enjoy equality of esteem and be treated equitably". In practice English, the mother tongue of just 8% of the people, increasingly dominates all the others. Its hegemony may even threaten the long-term survival of the country’s African languages, spoken as the mother tongue of 80% of South Africans, despite the government’s repeated promises to promote and protect indigenous languages and culture.
(2)Under apartheid, there were just two official languages, English and Afrikaans, a variant of Dutch with a dash of French, German, Khoisan (spoken by so-called Bushmen and Hottentots), Malay and Portuguese. Pre-colonial African languages were relegated to the black townships and tribal "homelands". Even there, English was often chosen as the medium of education in preference to the inhabitants’ mother tongues. Black South Africans increasingly rejected Afrikaans as the language of the main oppressor; English was a symbol of advancement and prestige.
(3)Today, 16 years after the advent of black-majority rule, English reigns supreme. Not only is it the medium of business, finance, science and the internet, but also of government, education, broadcasting, the press, advertising, street signs, consumer products and the music industry. For such things Afrikaans is also occasionally used, especially in the Western Cape province, but almost never an African tongue. The country’s Zulu-speaking president, Jacob Zuma, makes all his speeches in English. Parliamentary debates are in English. Even the instructions on bottles of prescription drugs come only in English or Afrikaans.
(4)Yet most black South Africans are not proficient in English. This is because most of their teachers give lessons in a language that is not their own. To give non-English-speaking children a leg-up, the government agreed last year that all pupils should be taught in their mother tongue for at least the first three years of primary school. But outside the rural areas, where one indigenous language prevails, this is neither financially nor logistically feasible.
(5)Some people suggest reducing the number of official languages to a more manageable three: English, Afrikaans and Zulu, the mother tongue of nearly a quarter of South Africans. But non-Zulus would object. Unless brought up on a farm, few whites speak an African language. For the school-leaving exam, proficiency in at least two languages is required. But most native English-speakers opt for Afrikaans, said to be easy to learn, rather than a useful but harder African tongue. At universities African-language departments are closing.
(6)Some effort is being made to protect African languages from this apparently inexorable decline. The Sunday Times, South Africa’s biggest-selling weekend paper, recently launched a Zulu edition. In September the Oxford University Press brought out the first isiZulu-English dictionary in more than 40 years.
(7)Many of the black elite, who send their children to English-speaking private schools or former white state schools, may accept English emerging as the sole national language. Many talk English to their children at home. Fluency in the language of Shakespeare is regarded as a sign of modernity, sophistication and power.
(8)Will South Africa’s black languages suffer the fate of the six languages brought by the country’s first Indian settlers 150 years ago? Maybe so, thinks Rajend Mesthrie at the University of Cape Town. For the first 100-odd years, he says, South Africa’s Indians taught and spoke to their children in their native tongues. But English is now increasingly seen as "the best way forward". Today most young Indians speak only English or are bilingual in English and Afrikaans, though they may continue to chat at home in a kind of pidgin English mixed with Indian and Zulu. [br] What is the author’s feeling towards the disappearance of African languages?
选项
A、Disappointed.
B、Optimistic.
C、Neutral.
D、Critical.
答案
C
解析
文章从一开始到结束都只是客观地描述南非语濒临灭绝的现象及原因,没有涉及作者的感情色彩,因此选项C正确。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3841267.html
相关试题推荐
Peoplelearnlanguagesallthetime,andforallkindsofreasons.Forexamp
Peoplelearnlanguagesallthetime,andforallkindsofreasons.Forexamp
Peoplelearnlanguagesallthetime,andforallkindsofreasons.Forexamp
Peoplelearnlanguagesallthetime,andforallkindsofreasons.Forexamp
Arabiclanguageisoneoftheworld’smostwidelyusedlanguages.Itisthe
Arabiclanguageisoneoftheworld’smostwidelyusedlanguages.Itisthe
Arabiclanguageisoneoftheworld’smostwidelyusedlanguages.Itisthe
Arabiclanguageisoneoftheworld’smostwidelyusedlanguages.Itisthe
Arabiclanguageisoneoftheworld’smostwidelyusedlanguages.Itisthe
Arabiclanguageisoneoftheworld’smostwidelyusedlanguages.Itisthe
随机试题
Oneoftheobviousproblemswithpredictingthefutureeffectsofclimatech
积极推进经济法制建设。 Promoteeconomiclegalsystembuilding.在汉语中,“积极”常被用来修饰“推进”“推行”“促进
“刘项之权未有所分也”,中“权”是()A.形声 B.会意 C.指事 D.
()是指基金销售部门在销售基金和相关产品的过程中,注重根据基金投资人的风险承受
农业生产结构是依据( )的成果和市场对农产品的需求而制定的。 A.农业生态
反馈在操作技能学习过程中的作用是非常关键的,其中()的作用尤为明显。 A.
证券公司提供的服务类型通常有()A:存款业务 B:担保业务 C:贷款业务
图示均质圆轮,质量m,半径R,由挂在绳上的重为W的物块使其绕质心轴O转动。设重物
某新建支线机场,空管工程的主要内容有:建设I类仪表着陆系统一套,气象雷达站,微波
冬期拌制混凝土需采用加热原材料时,应优先采用加热()的方法。A.水泥 B
最新回复
(
0
)