CityU hosts conference on the languages taking on the world
CityU hosts conference on the languages taking on the world
Over the past few decades, the English language has been expanding as the need grows for a common form of communication to facilitate trade and cultural exchange. But other languages, notably Chinese and Spanish, have also been moving in the same direction, albeit from very different starting points.
The Halliday Centre for Intelligent Applications of Language Studies (HCLS) of City University of Hong Kong (CityU) is holding an international conference on “Becoming a World Language: the growth of Chinese, English and Spanish” from 5 to 7 December.
More than 50 plenary addresses and lectures are being held as part of the “1st HCLS Conference on Becoming a World Language: the growth of Chinese, English and Spanish”, exploring the significance of a language transforming into a world language. Linguistics experts from all over the world have assembled to address some of the little-known effects of this phenomenon on the world’s speakers, speech communities and language systems.
The opening ceremony took place on 5 December. In his opening address, Professor David Tong Shuk-yin, Deputy President of CityU, said it was appropriate for a conference on Becoming a World Language to take place in
“Ten years on from Hong Kong’s return to China, both English and Putonghua have come to play leading roles in this globalised community. Far from decreasing in importance in post-colonial
Speaking during his opening plenary address on “Some Social-semiotic Reflections on Language Growth”, Professor M.A.K. Halliday, Emeritus Professor of Linguistics at the
Discussing what he described as the relatively recent emergence of English as the predominant international language and the way in which languages spread, Professor Halliday said one of the greatest challenges facing Putonghua’s emergence was its difficult written language. “The writing system is difficult for non-Chinese to comprehend but software advances may help overcome these obstacles,” he said.
Among the myriad topics under discussion during the conference are:
l the links between language and personal identity;
l the place of other international languages, such as Arabic, Hindi/Urdu, Russian, Malay/Indonesian, French;
l how much mixing does the language undergo in becoming a world language?;
l is the pattern of emergence to this status the same in the case of English, Chinese and Spanish, or do they have different trajectories?
For media enquiries, please contact Craig Francis (phone: 3442 6802 / 9028 2758) of the Communications Office of City University of Hong Kong.