Yes, absolutely. They are southerners and wanted me to learn it so they would speak in that whenever they talked to me and expected me to do the same in response. I know at least few people who do that sort of thing with their kids, if they want them to learn their language. It seems to work rather well.
Yeah, definitely. As long as it's actually the parents native tongue, or they're used to it so much it might as well be. Sometimes you get parents trying to raise their children in a language they speak imperfectly themselves, and I have my doubts about that, I must say.
well, what do you mean by 'non-Hindi-speaking regions'? Places where it isn't the dominant language? In that case, usually Hindi is the back-up language of choice before English, at least when speaking to people over, say 35. Under that, you might see more people using English secondarily. But in general, people will give you a snobbish look if you talk to them in English instead of either the local language or Hindi 

Oh, okay. It's possible I'm confusing the past with the present, or the political with the every-day language use - the context in which I came across this was something about how back in the day when India became independent, the southern states strongly opposed attempts to make state governments communicate with each other and with the federal government in Hindi. So they went with English instead. But maybe that isn't the case anymore, and in any case I guess it doesn't say much about how ordinary people communicate.
Plus... just because English is a national language doesn't mean people are actually any good at it
Don't get me wrong, many can speak English quite well, however, that is usually because they are speaking it quite often. The average person does not.

I was just saying, you know, surely India will have far higher percentages of people speaking English than a country where English doesn't have any particular status, like China, or Indonesia.
/Survey: Foreign language knowledge in Europe (and elsewhere)
24/09/2010 01:37:42 PM
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Re: /Survey: Foreign language knowledge in Europe
24/09/2010 02:10:57 PM
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Re: /Survey: Foreign language knowledge in Europe
24/09/2010 03:32:09 PM
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That is rather sad to say the least.
24/09/2010 04:15:32 PM
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Indeed
24/09/2010 06:23:52 PM
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Re: /Survey: Foreign language knowledge in Europe
24/09/2010 04:00:04 PM
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Re: /Survey: Foreign language knowledge in Europe
24/09/2010 05:47:09 PM
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Interesting.
24/09/2010 06:04:30 PM
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Re: Interesting.
24/09/2010 06:42:02 PM
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Re: Interesting.
24/09/2010 07:05:44 PM
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Re: Interesting.
24/09/2010 07:21:24 PM
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Re: Interesting.
24/09/2010 08:18:30 PM
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Re: /Survey: Foreign language knowledge in Europe (and elsewhere)
24/09/2010 09:38:05 PM
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Re: /Survey: Foreign language knowledge in Europe (and elsewhere)
25/09/2010 05:49:05 AM
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Self-study can be worth as much as formal classroom study, I suppose
25/09/2010 03:43:14 PM
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Certainly it can.
26/09/2010 12:35:56 PM
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Re: /Survey: Foreign language knowledge in Europe (and elsewhere)
25/09/2010 04:54:40 PM
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Re: /Survey: Foreign language knowledge in Europe (and elsewhere)
25/09/2010 07:38:29 PM
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Re: /Survey: Foreign language knowledge in Europe (and elsewhere)
26/09/2010 12:07:19 AM
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They should have asked about second languages rather than foreign languages.
26/09/2010 11:34:27 AM
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Re: /Survey: Foreign language knowledge in Europe (and elsewhere)
27/09/2010 03:18:30 PM
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