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Tongues tied to diversity

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  • Tongues tied to diversity

    presstelegram.com
    Article Published: Friday, March 11, 2005 - 11:01:01 AM PST

    Tongues tied to diversity

    L.A. County has some of the most exotic languages in nation.

    By Jason Kosareff
    Staff writer

    Looking for a conversation in Efik? How about Wu? Want to chat over
    coffee in the language of Ladino or Frisian?

    Good luck finding conversationalists in these exotic languages spoken
    by less than 80 people each in Los Angeles County.

    There are 135 languages spoken in the county, which ranks first in
    the nation for diversity of tongues, according to a study released
    this week.

    While California has 11.97 percent of the American population, the
    state has a majority of the country's Armenian, Cantonese, Mandarin,
    Samoan, Spanish and Tagalog speakers, according to the study by
    the U.S. English Foundation, a Washington, D.C.,-based nonpartisan
    interest group. A total of 207 languages were counted in the state.

    Many of the languages are spoken in the Long Beach area, including
    Khmer spoken by Cambodians, Tagalog spoken by Filipinos, and dialects
    of India.

    Using Census data, researchers counted 321 languages spoken across
    the nation.

    Rex Chang of Monterey Park speaks Hakka, the 108th most common language
    in the county. For the Hakka, anyone who comes from somewhere else
    is a part of their culture. They are a people fond of traveling and
    the name Hakka simply means "guest,' Chang said.

    The Hakka diaspora reaches around the globe, Chang said. What keeps
    everyone on the same page is the language, which originates from
    China's earliest dynasties in the Yellow River region.

    "I don't know about other families, but my family still forces everyone
    to learn to speak Hakka,' Chang said.

    The most obscure language in the region is Pennsylvania Dutch, with
    just 20 speakers, according to the study. Other exotic languages
    include Cajun with 25 speakers, Hopi with 25 speakers, Palau with 30
    speakers, while Keres, Ojibwa and Melanesian round out some of the
    rarest of tongues here.
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