Special English

From Free net encyclopedia

English dialects
British Isles
British English
East Anglian English
English English
Estuary English
Hiberno-English (Ireland)
Highland English
Manx English
Mid Ulster English
Midlands English
Northern English
Received Pronunciation
Scottish English
Welsh English
West Country dialects
United States
American English
African American Vernacular English
Appalachian English
Baltimorese
Boston English
California English
Chicano English
General American
Hawaiian English
Mid-Atlantic English
New York-New Jersey English
North Central American English
Pacific Northwest English
Southern American English
Spanglish
Canada
Canadian English
Newfoundland English
Quebec English
Franglais
Oceania
Australian English
New Zealand English
Asia
Chinglish
Hong Kong English
Indian English
Malaysian English
Burmese English
Philippine English
Singaporean English
Sri Lankan English
Other countries
Bermudian English
Caribbean English
Jamaican English
Liberian English
Malawian English
South African English
Miscellaneous
Basic English
Commonwealth English
Euro-English
Globish
International English
Llanito (Gibraltar)
North American English
Plain English
Simplified English
Special English
Standard English

Special English is a simplified version of the English language used by the United States broadcasting service Voice of America in daily broadcasts. The news is read slowly, using a limited vocabulary and simplified grammar. There is a short pause between adjacent words so that word boundaries are easily discerned. The intended audience of Special English are people who have studied English in school, but do not speak it in daily usage.

For example, an April 2002 script describes diabetes in this manner:

"The World Health Organization estimates that as many as one-hundred-twenty-million people have the disease diabetes. Diabetes is the name for several diseases with one thing in common: there is too much glucose, or sugar, in the blood. The disease develops when the body does not produce enough insulin or produces no insulin. Or the disease develops when the body cannot use insulin."

Another script talks about the Rolling Stones:

"The popularity of the Beatles led the way for more rock and roll bands from England to become popular in America. The Rolling Stones was the most important of these bands. The Rolling Stones is one of the few groups from the nineteen-sixties that is still performing and recording today. In nineteen sixty-five, the group recorded one of its most famous songs, 'Satisfaction'."

For those listeners whose own language is not English, it not only provides clear and simple news and information, but also helps them improve their use of American English. In some countries such as China, Special English is increasingly popular for junior and intermediate English learners.

Special English was first used on October 19, 1959.

See also

External link

es:Inglés especial ja:スペシャル・イングリッシュ simple:Special English tt:Maxsus İngliz tele