Indonesian TESOL Journal
Vol 5, No 2 (2023): Indonesian TESOL Journal (October

Language Shift, Language Death and Multilingualism: A Review of Case Studies

Marwa Mohammad Masood (United International University)



Article Info

Publish Date
27 Sep 2023

Abstract

Language shift causes threat to the existing languages in a community, especially those already endangered (Musgrave, 2014). Once threatened, these endangered languages go through the unfortunate process of extinction over time (Natsir and Lubis, 2021). Language death occurs when three of its most crucial values go extinct one by one. The three elements are- “loss of function”, “loss of prestige” and finally “loss of competence” (Kornai. 2013). A language goes completely extinct when last speaker of the language expires. This paper focuses on the dominating factors that result in the death of languages in different communities around the globe and illustrates a few case studies of particular communities where a major language shift occurred which simply replaced or resulted in the death of one of the most spoken languages with another politically and socially powerful one. The paper ends by mentioning a case study where effective steps helped to revive a dead language and successfully made it a widely spoken language by the people of a community.

Copyrights © 2023






Journal Info

Abbrev

ITJ

Publisher

Subject

Education Languange, Linguistic, Communication & Media

Description

Indonesian TESOL Journal (ITJ) published by LP2M IAIN Palopo is a biannual, refereed, open access, and practitioner-oriented electronic journal dedicated to enhancing and disseminating scholarly work of the current theory and research in the field of TESOL. It publishes both conceptual and ...