/ kalebeul / 2004 / 04 / 22 / language use survey /
While nationalist politicians continue to exaggerate hugely the number of Catalan speakers (think: lobbying, EU official languages), the new Idescat figures (Idescat is the notoriously unreliable Catalan government stats bureau) on social use suggest that the vast sums spent by the Catalan government over the past couple of decades on persuading and forcing people to hop from one Latin dialect have actually been resulting in the conversion of some 18% of native Spanish speakers into predominantly Catalan-speaking or bilingual bunnies:
| language | catalan | spanish | both | other |
| first | 2,213,100 | 2,929,100 | 152,000 | 177,000 |
| “own” | 2,670,100 | 2,424,700 | 283,200 | 93,300 |
| habitual | 2,742,600 | 2,410,300 | 255,100 | 62,600 |
| habitual less first | 529,500 | -518,800 | 103,100 | -114,400 |
I find them slightly bizarre for a couple of reasons:
Trevor @ 22 April 2004 4:51 PM
Trackback link.
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On Facebook, Trevor is back, stringing words together.
7:23 PM on 22 April 2004
Don’t be rediculous. With the due respect, it is not posible to teach someone in the Berber language because there are no books and it is not a usefull language to know in Europe
12:21 PM on 23 April 2004
That’s exactly the same attitude Franco’s people had to Catalan.