I've played for 12 years and this has never occurred to me.
I know of only a few places where you actually see things in WoW spelled out in English.
I've played for 12 years and this has never occurred to me.
I know of only a few places where you actually see things in WoW spelled out in English.
No it doesn't. Everything is translated from Common or other languages into English out of convenience. Even the "Temple of Boom" shield you see in WC3 on goblin workshops is translated from either Common or Goblin to be readable in English.
FOMO: "Fear Of Missing Out", also commonly known as people with a mental issue of managing time and activities, many expecting others to fit into their schedule so they don't miss out on things to come. If FOMO becomes a problem for you, do seek help, it can be a very unhealthy lifestyle..
That's really only if you're considering English the Human Language default in real life, which it.... super isn't, though I know it seems like it to most of us in the US and England- most sources agree that Chinese is the most commonly spoken human language, followed by Spanish, and then English. The more you know!
Anyway, no, there is no "English" language in the world of Warcraft- humans and the Alliance speak Common as their common language, which is not English but is presumably derived from whatever language the Vrykul originally spoke, while the Horde have adopted and learned Orcish as their common tongue.
https://www.reddit.com/r/wow/comment...nguage_exists/
Saw this wow subreddit post earlier this morning, very relevant.
I don't understand how we are able to understand every single adversary, it just makes ZERO sense that the Legion races, the Vrykul, Pandaren, Mogu, Mantid, Nerubians, Voids, etc all speak Common to us. The only exception seems to be the Faceless Ones, who always speak in their native language.
Does every npc and player have some kind of universal translator built into them, or something?
That I know, my theory was only built by the factors of the creators being english speaking, hence you see different spelling of words in common (US English) vs. UK English. My only connection to the theory, as well as the factor of well, humans.
I was close to build it on the humans being the primary race on Azeroth, as Orcs and Draenei weren't from said world but then I remembered, elves and trolls would've trumphed that.
FOMO: "Fear Of Missing Out", also commonly known as people with a mental issue of managing time and activities, many expecting others to fit into their schedule so they don't miss out on things to come. If FOMO becomes a problem for you, do seek help, it can be a very unhealthy lifestyle..
If Azeroth and Earth are in the same universe, yes. Otherwise, no.
Mandarin Chinese is spoken in China and Taiwan. Hong Kong and most Chinese communities overseas created before WWII speak Cantonese Chinese. Also some Asian countries have Mandarin Chinese as one of their languages, mainly becuase bussiness in the region, for example Singapore, where Mandarin Chinese is one of its official languages.
Then, speaking about native speakers, the second one is Spanish (also called Castilian in Spain, because is the language native to the ancient Kingdom of Castile and then becomes the official language for all Spain).
English is the third language if you take into account people that have it as a second language; if we take into account only native English speakers that use it as their primary language then it isn't even the third.
The English being used overseas is mostly because the States are the most powerful country nowadays, and after WWII. Its impact on everyday bussiness, military and cultural affairs has made English the lingua franca.
On topic about WoW, English is not the Human language, in fact every race has his own language and some races also know the Human one (called "common", a borrowed term from Tolkien ), this is lorewise, but because Blizzard is an American company, and it's a fucking game and you're supposed to understand it, we see all the game content in English or in the other languages availables (in my case, I'm Spanish and I play using the Spanish EU client).
You're actually only half correct here. This checks out if you're talking about native speakers, but if you talking about total speakers (including non-native speakers), English is the second most spoken language in the world, and it's not that far behind Mandarin Chinese.
The further issue is that the population of Mandarin Chinese speakers is pretty concentrated. English is the most popular second language in the world, with around as many people speaking it as a second language as people speaking it as a first. There is no Anglocentric bias here. English is a global language, it is the uncontested 'human language default'. If you don't live in an English speaking country, English is probably the language you're learning in school. You're not learning Mandarin. There's an official term for such a language - it's called a world language, and English is the prime example. Small tangent, but interesting (at least, I think so).
OT: Nah. There's some English on an arcway in Duskwood (thanks Reddit!) and a sign in Westfall too. If you think about it though, those were probably some of the first zones developed, and later on they clearly decided to keep the English out. It's referred to as common and displays as gibberish to Horde players, though if it were ever to be built upon lorewise it'd probably be similar to English/Latin.
Last edited by Caaethil; 2017-05-31 at 10:24 PM.