The mix of Spanish and English is the world’s fastest growing linguistic hybrid. Experts calculate that it is spoken by 50 million people

In a single sentence, Rolando Hernández moves smoothly between English and Spanish. His narration is uninterrupted through shifts from one tongue to the other. He’s not doing it to translate what he’s saying; he simply takes for granted that the person listening to him will understand. The 26-year-old Cuban American is trilingual: he doesn’t just speak English and Spanish, but also Spanglish, a hybrid speech variety that was born out of the mix of Anglo and Hispanic cultures. In his Miami neighborhood of Hialeah, where three-quarters of residents are of Cuban descent and 95% of the population is Hispanic, Spanglish (in Spanish, espanglish) rules: “It’s everywhere, from the closest McDonald’s drive-through to the galleries in Wynwood,” says Hernández.

Though it is hard to know the exact number of people who speak Spanglish, it’s estimated that there are 35 to 40 million people in the United States who, like Hernández, communicate with it, more than half of the 62 million Latinos who live in the country. It’s a number that will only grow as the Latino community expands over the coming years: by 2060, it is predicted that one in every four U.S. residents will have Latino heritage. “It is the fastest-growing hybrid language in the world,” says Ilan Stavans, professor of Latinx and Latin American studies at Massachusetts’s Amherst College.

  • sylver_dragon
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    3827 days ago

    Languages shift and change over time. English, as we currently know it, has undergone several such shifts, to the point that it’s less a language and more several languages dressed up in a trench coat pretending to be one. Adding more Spanish words to the language is really just a continuation of a centuries old trend.

  • @[email protected]
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    1527 days ago

    Anglocentric supremacists:

    “Stop speaking that weird language! Speak more English!”

    Spanglish pioneers:

    start speaking more English, make “that weird language” less “weird”

    Supremacists:

    “Not like that!”

    • @[email protected]
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      27 days ago

      They’d better stop using the word “language”, then, as it’s of Latin origin!

  • @[email protected]
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    27 days ago

    Only 26% of English is made up of words of Germanic origin anyway (although they do tend to be the ones used most in everyday speech).

      • @[email protected]
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        26 days ago

        Totalmente! Francia? Español raro… Italiano? Español argentino. Chino? Querrás decir chileno? Inglés es español germánico… y no me hagas empezar con el ruso! Потому что я не гаварю па русски

        *es solo para seguir la joda, nada de esto es serio

  • @[email protected]
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    1227 days ago

    Every time I hear Spanglish it just sounds like ‘You pinches gringos corrupt everything you touch’

  • @MagicShel
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    527 days ago

    Could be a good way to start learning both English and Spanish for folks who only speak one or the other like myself. It’ll never affect me, but if it did I’d pick it up just from proximity.

  • AItoothbrush
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    026 days ago

    Emglish is a shit language and im saying this as a native(or almost) speaker. In sweden theres a language thats a mix of english, turkish, arabic, etc added to swedish. Languages change and evolve you know and you cant stop that.