technically anglosphere countries are also countries that were controlled by the British Empire.
TastyYellowBees on
Canada has 30-40% of its population that do not speak English?? That cannot be right.
stubbywoods on
Either the French are overestimating their English abilities or the Germans are underrating them there’s no way they’re that close.
communist_autist on
Great content. I’d also be interested to see the differences in the countries that speak English the worst—the bottom 10% isn’t included, nor is the distinction between no data and under 1m speakers.
icadkren on
PH is colonized by USA empire so yeah …
KuriousKhemicals on
Hilarious that Norway outranks the US for percentage. English is a first language of the vast majority here yet Norway is absolutely *killing it* as a second language.
iamnearlysmart on
The data about Pakistan is totally sus. Their literacy rate is 60%. Let’s discount the exceptional illiterate English speakers, if they are significant in numbers let me know, then we are invited to believe that roughly two thirds of all people that receive education (less than 10% graduate college) can speak English?
Edit : actually it’s closer to four out of five literate people of Pakistan looking at the number in first chart.
kodex1717 on
I was shocked that about half the people spoke great English when I went to Warsaw. It seemed like there was an English school on every corner and two on every block in between.
I also found it interesting that the other half of people spoke absolutely zero English. I would have figured maybe a couple words here and there, but nope. It was my first experience trying to talk to people where our respective languages shared no common root. Compare that to Western Europe where English is mutually intelligible with every other language about 1/3 of the time if you use your imagination.
[deleted] on
[deleted]
chundricles on
Where’s China (not Hong Kong).
Also, shouldn’t China – Hong Kong be in the “once controlled by the British empire” block
Splinterfight on
Those babies better up their game
Letter_Effective on
Mexico is lower than what you would expect for a country right next to the US, my guess is that the Mexicans who speak good English tend to immigrate to the US and there is enough Spanish-language media available that they don’t have to turn to English-language content for music, movies etc.
Bliitzthefox on
Over 40 million in the US that don’t speak English. Ouch
arkofjoy on
A few years ago we we visiting our daughter who lived in a small village in Italy. My wife made the effort to learn enough Italian to get directions and things but I just couldn’t hang onto the words.
Then I discovered a work around. The majority of the locals spoke no English, but in the area there were a lot of recent African migrants. Half came from former French colonies and half came from former English colonies. So if I saw an African person, I had a 50 /50 chance of being understood, but with the ltalians about a 5 percent chance of being understood.
14 Comments
technically anglosphere countries are also countries that were controlled by the British Empire.
Canada has 30-40% of its population that do not speak English?? That cannot be right.
Either the French are overestimating their English abilities or the Germans are underrating them there’s no way they’re that close.
Great content. I’d also be interested to see the differences in the countries that speak English the worst—the bottom 10% isn’t included, nor is the distinction between no data and under 1m speakers.
PH is colonized by USA empire so yeah …
Hilarious that Norway outranks the US for percentage. English is a first language of the vast majority here yet Norway is absolutely *killing it* as a second language.
The data about Pakistan is totally sus. Their literacy rate is 60%. Let’s discount the exceptional illiterate English speakers, if they are significant in numbers let me know, then we are invited to believe that roughly two thirds of all people that receive education (less than 10% graduate college) can speak English?
Edit : actually it’s closer to four out of five literate people of Pakistan looking at the number in first chart.
I was shocked that about half the people spoke great English when I went to Warsaw. It seemed like there was an English school on every corner and two on every block in between.
I also found it interesting that the other half of people spoke absolutely zero English. I would have figured maybe a couple words here and there, but nope. It was my first experience trying to talk to people where our respective languages shared no common root. Compare that to Western Europe where English is mutually intelligible with every other language about 1/3 of the time if you use your imagination.
[deleted]
Where’s China (not Hong Kong).
Also, shouldn’t China – Hong Kong be in the “once controlled by the British empire” block
Those babies better up their game
Mexico is lower than what you would expect for a country right next to the US, my guess is that the Mexicans who speak good English tend to immigrate to the US and there is enough Spanish-language media available that they don’t have to turn to English-language content for music, movies etc.
Over 40 million in the US that don’t speak English. Ouch
A few years ago we we visiting our daughter who lived in a small village in Italy. My wife made the effort to learn enough Italian to get directions and things but I just couldn’t hang onto the words.
Then I discovered a work around. The majority of the locals spoke no English, but in the area there were a lot of recent African migrants. Half came from former French colonies and half came from former English colonies. So if I saw an African person, I had a 50 /50 chance of being understood, but with the ltalians about a 5 percent chance of being understood.
I thought it was hilarious.