Johnson: Language networks

Source: The Economist
Story flagged by: Maria Kopnitsky

HOW would you rank “important” languages? If asked to rattle them off, many people start with English, but after that are reluctant to go further. Important how, they ask. One approach would be to look at people and money: surely a language is important if it is spoken by lots of people, in countries with great wealth (and presumably, therefore, power).

But in December came a new approach. A group of scholars* approached the task by first looking at how languages are connected to one another, rather than viewing them in isolation. They then decided to see if this was a good predictor of how many famous people spoke a given language. If a language is well connected to others (a “hub” language with many bilinguals), its speakers will tend to be famous. And the names of the connected languages turns out to be rather interesting.

To find links between languages, the researchers created a “global language network” (GLN) three different ways (see graphic). One was Wikipedia editors: a bilingual Wikipedian who edits articles in both Arabic and English counts as strengthening the bond between Arabic and English. The second was Twitter: users who had tweeted at least six full sentences in a second language were treated as strengthening the bond between those two languages. The third was a more formal, old-fashioned metric: book translation. UNESCO, the United Nations’ cultural organisation, keeps a database of translated books, and each of the 2.2m translations was counted as a bond strengthening the two languages. (These bonds, of course, are asymmetrical: some languages have more books translated out of them than into them and vice-versa.) More.

See: The Economist

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Comments about this article


Johnson: Language networks
alex suhoy
alex suhoy  Identity Verified
Ukraine
Local time: 15:00
English to Russian
+ ...
*** Jan 3, 2015

But languages are not easily translatable, and they have nuanced strengths; thus not perfectly comparable. For example german is best for philosophy texts, french for mathematics and diplomacy, English for business and technical texts and Spanish for poetry and romance.

 
Christine Andersen
Christine Andersen  Identity Verified
Denmark
Local time: 14:00
Member (2003)
Danish to English
+ ...
I would like to see graphics centred on other languages Jan 3, 2015

It would be interesting to see how much is translated out of a language, as an indication of how much the thinkers of that language influence the rest of the world.

I translate from a very 'small' language - Danish - which is spoken by under six million people in Denmark, and by Danes abroad. However, a surprising number of Danes are world famous, and their works are read in other languages round the world.
From Hans Christian Andersen and Kierkegaard to Niels Bohr, Niels Finsen
... See more
It would be interesting to see how much is translated out of a language, as an indication of how much the thinkers of that language influence the rest of the world.

I translate from a very 'small' language - Danish - which is spoken by under six million people in Denmark, and by Danes abroad. However, a surprising number of Danes are world famous, and their works are read in other languages round the world.
From Hans Christian Andersen and Kierkegaard to Niels Bohr, Niels Finsen and others.

Danes trade all round the world - from food and agricultural products, pharmaceuticals and many industrial products to energy and construction - FL Smidth, Grundfoss, Danfoss, Coloplast, Vestas... Lego ...

Translations often go through English, but many go direct.

The same is sure to be true of other 'small' languages - the other Scandinavian languages and Dutch, for instance.

The impact on the world is probably far greater than might be expected, simply from the size of the population that speaks the languages.

Keep on researching - there is sure to be lots more waiting to be discovered!

[Edited at 2015-01-03 21:29 GMT]

[Edited at 2015-01-03 21:30 GMT]
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