http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mr._Nobody_%28film%29
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iuJw9GwqFXs&feature=related
this film is amazing, a must see ! ( and I stop comments here because if I don’t do so I won’t be able to stop myself typing about it )
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mr._Nobody_%28film%29
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iuJw9GwqFXs&feature=related
this film is amazing, a must see ! ( and I stop comments here because if I don’t do so I won’t be able to stop myself typing about it )
khan academy seems to have made ideas
http://ocw.mit.edu/index.htm ->Waw
http://openstudy.com/ -> I Do recommend this one !
World amazed me again
The preceding maps are only a fraction of the nearly 7000 languages that are spoken in the world. The languages that we have not mapped tend to be confined to just a few often neighbouring countries; many are spoken by members of just one tribe.
India, Indonesia, The Philippines, and much of Africa all have many people speaking languages that are not widely spoken outside their own country. Some of the largest of the languages included here are Telugu and Marathi, both have high numbers in speakers in certain regions of India; the Sunda language, spoken by around 27 million people on the Indonesian island of Java; and Yoruba and Igbo, both spoken in and around Nigeria.
Territory size shows the proportion of all people who speak one of the languages that has not been included as a separate map that live in that territory.
This map uses data from ‘Ethnologue: Languages of the World’, and shows the number of languages considered indigenous to each country that are still spoken there. Due to issues of language identification (see technical notes), it is possible to dispute the data used here, and a review of Ethnologue by Campbell and Grondona (2008) does just that; they claim “… the number of indigenous (‘living’) languages of different countries is inflated …”.
However, the map presents a good picture of linguistic diversity. Papua New Guinea has nearly 10% (820) of the world’s indigenous living languages, so that there are only an average of 7000 speakers per language living there. Indonesia (737), Nigeria (510), and India (415) also have a large number of native languages.
At the other end of the scale, Belarus, Maldives, DPR Korea and Holy See each have only one indigenous living language.
Territory size shows the proportion of the world’s Indigenous living languages that are spoken there.