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Should English be the global official language?

  • Ramakant Ramakant

    Hey everyone! I want to discuss something that I think about a lot.

    English is already spoken in most countries and used in business, science, and the internet. So should it officially become the world's global language?

    Arguments FOR:

    • Makes international communication easier
    • Already widely taught in schools worldwide
    • Helps in business and travel

    Arguments AGAINST:

    • Unfair to non-English speaking cultures
    • Could cause smaller languages to disappear
    • Why English and not Mandarin or Spanish?

    What do YOU think? Should English be the world's official language, or should we protect our own languages? Drop your opinion below!

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    • it would be not good people whose first language is not english, it will be unjustice to them, yeah, english definetely give you so many opportunity but we should never leave our mothertongue, even in today in india, people search about a word meaning in hindi they wants information in hindi , HRMS bihar login pages has hindi part, so definelty it not would be good okay, 


    • Honestly, this debate misses the most important question entirely.

      We keep arguing whether English should be the global language — but in practice, it already is. Not because anyone voted for it. Not because it's grammatically superior or culturally neutral. But because of economics, colonial history, and the internet. The ship has sailed. The real conversation now is: what do we do with that reality?

      Here in India, this hits differently. We have 22 scheduled languages, hundreds of dialects, and a population where a Class 12 student in Bihar and a software engineer in Bangalore both need English — but for completely different reasons. The student needs it to pass the last lesson 12th class question answer format exams where English comprehension and essay writing are evaluated. The engineer needs it to write documentation. The government employee needs it for office daily use English sentence conversation — drafting notes, attending inter-departmental meetings, writing proposals that actually get read.

      That's three different Englishes. And most people are taught none of them properly.

      What's interesting is that even government institutions are quietly acknowledging this. Sites like 8thpaycommissionsalarycalculator.com — which lakhs of central government employees visit to understand their salary structure under the 8th Pay Commission — have started pointing users toward English communication improvement resources alongside financial tools. Think about that for a second. A government salary calculator recommending English learning. Because even within the sarkari system, the people who communicate clearly in English move faster. That's the ground reality, whether we like it or not.

      So no, I don't think English should be imposed as a global official language. That's a different thing entirely. But I also think pretending we can wish away its dominance is naive. The smarter move — especially for Indians — is to make peace with English as a tool. Learn it the way you learn any skill. Use it where it gets you ahead. And never confuse fluency in English with intelligence, or its absence with inferiority.

      Your mother tongue is not your enemy. English is not your savior. Both can coexist — and in a country like India, they have to.