In Singapore, minority language speakers begin raising their voices - News Summed Up

In Singapore, minority language speakers begin raising their voices


SINGAPORE: Kevin Martens Wong reels off sentences in Kristang, which is among several minority languages in Singapore enjoying a new lease of life after a decades-long drive to encourage the use of English and Mandarin. Lee, who ruled Singapore for over three decades and died in 2015, described in his memoirs how he had to force the issue. Non-Chinese tongues, such as Kristang – spoken by descendants of Portuguese colonisers who arrived in what is now Malaysia in the 16th century and married locals – also faded. One thing that unexpectedly flourished was "Singlish", a local patois that mixes English with words from the myriad tongues spoken in Singapore. It is the Chinese dialect that is most common in Singapore but it has become less widespread, particularly among the young.


Source: New Strait Times December 10, 2017 05:26 UTC



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