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Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development
Editor and Book Reviews Editor: John Edwards (St Francis Xavier University, Canada)


Volume: 23  Number: 4  Page: 282–295

When English is Not a Mother Tongue: Linguistic Ownership and the Eurasian Community in Singapore
Lionel Wee

The spread of English as a global language has led to the question of 'ownership'. Who, it is often asked, really owns English? The answer to this question, it is suggested, has implications for a variety of issues such as what standards of English are acceptable, how it should be taught, and how problems of intelligibility ought to be approached. In this paper, I first point out some of the different ways in which linguistic ownership can be manifested. I then look at the case of the Eurasian community in Singapore, and its calls that English be accorded mother-tongue status for that community. I examine the Government's lack of support for such calls, and try to show why this might be so. I argue that in the case of Singapore, linguistic ownership is part of an overall government strategy of managing ethnic relations. As such, claims of ownership of the English language must be understood in the context of how they might affect such a strategy.

© Multilingual Matters 2002

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