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- Sep 18, 2018
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There are countries that play rugby which are not English-speaking - most prominently (among others) France, Italy, Georgia, Japan and Argentina - and it is high time that the referees took this into account.
So a good ref has to learn how many languages?There are countries that play rugby which are not English-speaking - most prominently (among others) France, Italy, Georgia, Japan and Argentina - and it is high time that the referees took this into account.
They should specialise - some learn Spanish, others Italian, others French, others Japanese, maybe others Georgian and/or Romanian, and a few may have a combination of more than one.So a good ref has to learn how many languages?
Well exactly.However when there are professional referees that can speak Spanish and you have Argentina vs Chile reffed by someone who cannot speak a word of Spanish, then you are doing something wrong.
I can say the same about other languages.It is not an advantage to speak English it is a disadvantage if you don't speak English.
That also works in Birmingham, but you do need to be a bit more patient.Loud and slow English seems to works for most Brits in Spain.
Programming languages are essentially in English, as is SQLIf English was the only language apart from computer programming languages then everybody would just speak communicate in English and no need to be multi language as everybody would understand what each other was communicating to each other.
Than if more than one language was used.
Ps computer programming is the second best language with English being the best most useful.
Mandarin and Spanish both have more native speakers than English in fact.But if everybody just spoke English then communication would be much easier than if everybody tried to speak in languages the other people they are communicating with did not speak in.
Ps why English? It is the most widely spoken language as of 2024.