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Future of Spanish in the United States
Generally, US Hispanics (13.4% of the population
in 2002) are bilingual to some degree. A study by Simmons Market
Research found that 19% of the Hispanic population speak only Spanish
while 9% speak only English, 55% have limited English proficiency
and 17% are fully Englidh-Spanish bilingual.
Intergenerational transmission of Spanish
is a better indicator of the future of Spanish in the United States
than crude numbers of native Spanish-speaking immigrants in a given
moment of time. Although Latin American immigrants have various
levels of English proficiency, Hispanics who are second-generation
American in the United States almost all speak English, but about
50 percent speak Spanish at home. Two-thirds of third-generation
Mexican Americans speak English exclusively at home.
There are more Spanish speakers in the United
States than there are speakers of French (another language inherited
from European colonization), Hawaiian, and the various Native American
languages taken all together. Living an exclusively Spanish-speaking
life is viable in some areas due to the constant influx of immigrants
and the prevalence of Spanish-language mass media, such as Univisión,
Telemundo USA, and Azteca America. Also, because of the North American
Free Trade Agreement, it is now common for many American manufacturers
to use trilingual product labeling in which the same text is repeated
in English, French, and Spanish. Apart from the businesses that
have always catered to Spanish-speaking immigrants, a small but
rapidly increasing number of mainstream American retailers are beginning
to provide dual-language advertising and in-store signage in both
English and Spanish.
Spanish is the most widely taught non-English
language in U.S. secondary schools and institutions of higher education.
Perhaps these factors can guarantee the survival
of the Spanish in the United States, but it is necessary to remember
that historically the original languages of immigrants tend to disappear
or become greatly reduced through assimilation and generational
change. On the other side, the Spanish language has disappeared
in several countries and territories during the 20th century, notably
in the Pacific Island nations of Guam, Micronesia, Palau, Northern
Marianas, and Marshall Islands. In the Philippines, it has now virtually
died out (2,658 speakers, 1990 Census). In addition, the English-Only
movement seeks to establish English as the only official language
of the United States.
However, there are many factors which indicate
that the status of Spanish is in a healthy state. The State of the
Union Addresses and other U.S. Presidential speeches have been translated
into Spanish following the precedent set by the Clinton Administration.
Official Spanish translations are available at Whitehouse.gov (http://www.whitehouse.gov).
In addition to this, some non-Hispanic politicians who are fluent
in the Spanish language have often delivered speeches in Spanish
to Hispanic majority constituencies.
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