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  • NY: Talk of the town

    TALK OF THE TOWN
    By SAM WILLIAMS

    New York Post, NY
    June 20 2004

    June 20, 2004 -- New York is a city lost in translation. Almost half of
    the Big Apple's residents do not speak English as their first language,
    according to surprising new research.

    The research, conducted by the Modern Language Association, gives the
    first neighborhood-by-neighborhood analysis of the languages spoken
    across the five boroughs.

    English, the official language in New York City since 1664, is spoken
    as a first language by 3.9 million residents, while almost 3.6 million
    people are more familiar with another tongue.

    English is no longer the most widely spoken first language in more
    than 30 New York neighborhoods, the research found.

    Spanish has become the most widely spoken language in one-quarter of
    the city's neighborhoods.

    The research, which uses data from the 2000 Census, allows linguists to
    track everything from the number of Italian speakers in Tottenville,
    S.I., (669) to the number of Gujarati speakers in Glen Oaks, Queens
    (635).

    "Our goal is to let people see what languages are spoken where," says
    Rosemary Feal, executive director of the Modern Language Association,
    an organization dedicated to promoting the study and teaching of
    languages.

    David Goldberg, a Yiddish-language scholar who is MLA's director
    of foreign-language programs, said the research also breaks down
    neighborhood language patterns into two major age groups -- under 18
    and over 18.

    Such capabilities make it easy to spot the generation difference
    between Manhattan's Yiddish-speaking community, where less than 3
    percent of speakers are under 18, and Brooklyn's Yiddish-speaking
    community, where the number of children speakers jumps to 35 percent.


    Venture up to Rockland County, and the ratio of youthful speakers
    rises to 47 percent.

    "You can see a vibrant, relatively young Hasidic community moving in,"
    says Goldberg.

    A similar pattern appears to be emerging within the city's
    Chinese-speaking population.

    Traditionally centered around Manhattan's Lower East Side, the
    community has formed two distinct offshoots in Brooklyn and Flushing,
    Queens, over the last two decades.

    Again, age data offer a hint at new immigration patterns: In Manhattan,
    13 percent of Chinese speakers are under 18.

    In Brooklyn and Queens, the numbers rise to 18 percent and 15 percent,
    respectively.

    When it comes to assessing the city's two main language groups,
    English and Spanish, The Bronx weighs in with the city's largest
    Spanish-speaking population (534,660), while Staten Island boasts
    the largest percentage of English speakers -- 74 percent.

    Both boroughs have their surprises, however. The Bronx also happens
    to be home to the city's largest Tagalog community (3,981), while
    Staten Island's 10304 ZIP code hosts the largest concentration of
    African-language speakers, 4.3 percent.

    To really hear New York's increasing linguistic diversity, one need
    only visit Queens.

    In addition to topping out in terms of native Chinese (126,904), Korean
    (57,447), and Urdu (17,837) speakers, the city's second-largest borough
    boasts the most Armenian (3,531), Thai (2,794), and Navajo speakers
    (11).

    Perhaps the most significant evidence of linguistic diversity,
    however, is the fact that English, while still predominant, registers
    as a majority language in less than half -- 28 out of 60 -- Queens
    ZIP codes.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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