David Graddol

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

David Graddol
Born1953
United Kingdom
Died1 March 2019 (aged 65–66)
Notable workThe Future of English? (1997)
SchoolLinguistics

David Graddol (1953 – 1 March 2019) was a British linguist[1] who worked in applied linguistics, discourse analysis, sociolinguistics, and history of linguistics. He died on 1 March 2019.[2]

Research interest[edit]

He was perhaps best known for his 1997 book The Future of English?, published by the British Council, in which he offers scenarios for how English as a world language may develop. Most notably, he pointed out that native speakers of English were or would soon be outnumbered by those who speak English as a second or foreign language. In an article that focuses more specifically on this issue, he stated the following:

The decline of the native speaker in numerical terms is likely to be associated with changing ideas about the centrality of the native speaker to norms of usage. [...] Large numbers of people will learn English as a foreign language in the 21st century and they will need teachers, dictionaries and grammar books. But will they continue to look towards the native speaker for authoritative norms of usage?

— "The decline of the native speaker", pages 67–68

Graddol's views about English as a world language are similar to, though not identical with, those held by his linguist colleague David Crystal.

Career[edit]

Graddol graduated from the University of York with a BA in Language and Linguistics in 1975, also in Sociology in 1983.[3] He earned his PhD from the University of Stockholm.

Personal life[edit]

He married Margaret Keeton and they had triplet daughters.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Graddol, David (20 April 2005). "Spoken everywhere but at what cost?". The Guardian.
  2. ^ "David Graddol RIP - BAAL".
  3. ^ "The Future of English". Grapevine (Spring/Summer 1998). Alumni Office, University of York: 20.

Works (selected)[edit]