YESSS
This is an opinion question. A pro argument could be, it would unite the country in a unified language and help us progress, also save tons of paper (since government documents are printed in other languages as well). A con argument could be, it would discourage immigrants from coming to America (this is the actual reason why America does not have an official language).
The United States does not have an "official" or "national" language. MrV The de facto language of the US is English.
The US, for one. In order to have a national language, it has to be written somewhere that an official national language exists. In the US there isn't any statement defining a national language. In addtion there are countries with more than one national language (Belgium, Switzerland for example).
me and u that makes 2
There is technically no official language in the US, but english is by far the most widely used and is the closest thing to a national language the country has.
Because no other language can take place of National Language in India..
english The US does not have an official language. English is the de facto language, official languages of 30 states, and spoken by about 95% of the population.
If u r an Indian, u should atleast know about it... well, Yes, Hindi is our(India) national language... Jai Hind...
The official language is the one all business is conducted in, so that everybody should know it, and the national language may only be used by some people.
yes it is..no solution has been found on this prblm..each one wants their language to b the national language...being more practical one should accept that hindi being the most spoken language in india should become the national language...
Mono is based .. one national language. whereas based multi national language also has multiple languages. The mono- based national language is a national language based solely on one language or dialect of the country. For example: National language based on Tagalog language. Based multi-national language is the national language with many dialects or languages upon which a nation. National language of the Philippines-based language Tagalog but with contributions of other languages or dialects such as Cebuano, Ilocano, Ilonggo etc.
India and Bangladesh. Their national anthems are in Bengali language which is not their national language.
India does not have a national language.