File talk:Anglospeak(800px)Countries.png

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Madagascar is to be removed at once[edit]

English is no longer official in Madagascar, someone should correct the map. Englisch ist nicht mehr offiziell in Madagaskar, jemand sollte die Karte berichtigen. L'anglais n'est plus officiel au Madagascar, quelqu'un devrait corriger la carte. O inglês já não é oficial em Madagáscar, alguém deveria corrigir o mapa. 84.148.174.96 (talk) 22:14, 19 January 2011 (UTC)[reply]

South Africa and Nigeria light blue! Same thing for Quebec[edit]

In S.A. barely 7 % speak English as their mother tongue; Afrikaans or Xulu for example are much more spoken. It is just one of the 12 official languages there (as it is in the rest of anglophone Africa). Same thing for Nigeria. Putting those two countries in the same color as GB or USA seems heavily biased by the creator. In this condition the map is not correct. 79.211.110.82 (talk) 19:22, 22 January 2011 (UTC)[reply]

As of Quebec, first of all English is explicitly NOT official there, but solely French. That alone should make things clear enough for everybody in charge of the map and interested in non-biased information. Furthermore, did you ever see all of Canada in dark blue in the French language map?? Would be the same thing, but it is correctly put in light blue...

Considerations[edit]

Considerations:

  1. Create a shade of blue that represents: "Countries/regions in which the mother tongue of the majority of the population is an English-based creole language but the main language of governance is English"
  2. Use the color purple that shows the countries/regions where there is a small English-creole speaking ethnic minority in a country that may or may not use standard English as the language of government.
  3. Another shade of blue should refer to the countries in which there is a widely spoken Anglo-creole language in the nation/region although non of official languages are English.
  4. Use the color shown below (used to indicate where Russian is spoken) to show countries/regions in which one of the official languages is English but also has the presence of an English-based creole spoken as a lingua franca in informal situations by people who may also be well educated in formal English.
  5. Don't forget to use a green square to show cities/settlements/regions where Englsih is a prominent minority language.
  6. Use dots to show countries to small to see, e.g. Caribbean, Southeast Asia.
P.S. Don't forget about shading Quebec the right shade.

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Here are their uses:

English-based creole languages:
They are spoken in: the eastern coast of Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, and Panama roughly stretching from the Caratasca Lagoon in Honduras to the Bocas del Toro Archipelago in Panama; the Bay Islands off the coast of Honduras; the Colombian-controlled Archipelago of San Andrés off the coast of Nicaragua; the Samaná Peninsula in the Dominican Republic; very small, scattered communities in the northeastern Florida wilderness; the South Carolina Lowcountry and the Sea Islands in coastal South Carolina and Georgia; small settlements near the national border in the Maripasoula region of French Guiana; a small community in the interior wilderness of the Marowijne District in Suriname; a small cluster of settlements at the bank of the Coppename River; eastern Suriname wilderness; around the Saramacca River and Suriname River with some populations in French Guiana; an in The Gambia.
Refer to this list to get ideas about how to show small countries/regions.

Legend[edit]

English
 
Countries/dependencies where English has official language status and/or is the main mother tongue.
 
Countries/dependencies where the mother tongue is an English-based Creole but the main language of government is formal English.
 
Countries/dependencies in which there is a widely spoken Anglo-creole language in the nation/region although non of official languages are English.
 
Countries where English is official but is not a widely-spoken language.
 
Countries in which English is not the native tongue but a English-based creole has reached the status of lingua franca in informal settings. Standard English is still used as lingua franca in formal settings as it is also the official language.
 
English-based creole languages unique to a small ethnic minority.
 
Cities/settlements where English is a major minority language and/or has a notable presence large presence.


ThisguyYEAH (talk) 02:34, 3 September 2011 (UTC)[reply]