It Increased
English grammar is the rules of the language - things like "verbs and nouns agree in number" or "the goes in front of the noun not after it". English literature is books, etc, written in English.
No one has ever counted them, but there are thousands of them.
Letters and the occasional number and full stop :)
The Global Language Monitor designated "Web 2.0" as word number one million in the English language. See the related link below for more information.
Because many people consider it to be prestigious. This can be shown by the fact that many people are learning English as a second language. There are more native Chinese speakers than any other language in the world. But the number of English speakers in the world is even greater because so many people learn English as a second language.
English is spoken by the largest number of countries. It is an official language in 59 countries.
The number 1 most spoken language in North America is English.
In the English language there is no such number.
Mandarin Chinese is the language spoken by the greatest number of non-English speakers. It is the most widely spoken language in the world, with over a billion speakers.
googol
It's not possible to count the words in any language, because there is no universal definition of what a word is. But most estimates place the number of words in any language between 40,000 and 160,000 words.Note: The language with the largest number of words is English, estimated at 170,000 to 250,000 words. No language has more words than English.
English grammar is the rules of the language - things like "verbs and nouns agree in number" or "the goes in front of the noun not after it". English literature is books, etc, written in English.
English is the most commonly spoken language in the United States.
for all i know it's english...the universal language
the number 4 is the only number in the English language that has the same number of letters in its name as its meaning
Definitely, english. Then, spanish and chinese.
The Scots language has its basis in Old English (or "Inglis", as the Scottish people called it at the time). A number of pidgins and creoles also have their basis in English, but Scots is recognised as a separate language.