Here's excellent motivation to keep on studying English, have a look...
Non native-speakers of the language now outnumber native speakers 3 to 1.
English is spoken as first language by more than 370 million people throughout the world, and is used as a second language by as many, if not more. One in five of the world's population speaks English with some degree of competence. It is an official or semi-official language in over 70 countries, and it plays a significant role in many more. English is not just one standard language, but can be thought of as a "family", which includes many different varieties. The map below shows where English and its varieties are spoken nowadays:
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| countries with significant concentrations of native speakers of English (in all of these countries English is an official or de facto language of administration) | |
| other countries in which English is an official or important administrative language | |
Source: Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page)
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Within a decade, 2 billion people will be studying English and about half the world — about 3 million people — will speak it. Non-native speakers of the language now outnumber native speakers 3 to 1, according to English language expert David Crystal. He recognizes that there is never before been a language that's been spoken by more people as a second language than a first. In Asia alone, the number of English-users has topped 350 million — roughly the combined populations of the United States, Britain and Canada. There are more Chinese children studying English — about 100 million — than there are Britons.
What people use English for
The massive English-learning industry in India alone is a $100 million-per year business. It's the front line of a global revolution in which hundreds of millions of people are learning English, the planet's language for almost every kind of transaction. English is the main language of commerce, technology, communication, science, academic conferences, business, entertainment, airports and air-traffic control, diplomacy, radio, newspapers, books, sports, tourism, international competitions, pop music advertising etc. — and, increasingly, empowerment.


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