- Braj Kachru
Braj Kachru was born around 1932 in
Kashmir . He is a scholar of different varieties ofWorld English and ofKashmiri . His work is in the field of Englishlinguistics .The circles of English
To better understand the use of English in different countries, Kachru conceived the idea of three concentric circles of the language.
The “inner circle” represents the traditional bases of English: the
United Kingdom , theUnited States ,Australia ,New Zealand ,Ireland ,Malta , anglophoneCanada andSouth Africa , and some ofCaribbean territories. The total number of English speakers in the inner circle is as high as 380 million, of whom some 120 million are outside theUnited States .Next comes the “outer circle,” which includes countries where English is not an
official language , but is important for historical reasons (e.g. theBritish Empire ) and plays a part in the nation’s institutions. This circle includesIndia ,Nigeria , thePhilippines ,Bangladesh ,Pakistan ,Malaysia ,Tanzania ,Kenya , non-Anglophone South Africa and Canada, etc. The total number of English speakers in the outer circle is estimated to range from 150 million to 300 million.Finally, the “expanding circle” encompasses those countries where English plays no historical or governmental role, but where it is nevertheless widely used as a
foreign language orlingua franca . This includes much of the rest of the world's population:China ,Russia ,Japan , most ofEurope ,Korea ,Egypt ,Indonesia , etc. The total in this expanding circle is the most difficult to estimate, especially because English may be employed for specific, limited purposes, usuallybusiness English . The estimates of these users range from 100 million to one billion.The inner circle (UK, USA,etc.) is 'norm-providing'. That means that English language norms are developed in these countries - English is the
first language there. The outer circle (mainlyNew Commonwealth countries) is 'norm-developing'. The expanding circle (much of the rest of the world) is 'norm-dependent', because it relies on the standards set by native speakers in the inner circe.Personal
He is the father of
Shamit Kachru , astring theorist .References
Among his works are "The Alchemy of English" (1986) and "The Handbook of World Englishes" (2006).
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