Notahealbot
Grandfathered
well, in the context of the EU it just seems pragmatic. basically a lingua franca.The really terrible part is that people choose to have "official" languages.
well, in the context of the EU it just seems pragmatic. basically a lingua franca.The really terrible part is that people choose to have "official" languages.
that's the point of having a common language to conduct business.Except the EU is not a singular country. But it's member nations do have official languages with the exception of the U.K.
eu working languages are drawn from official languages. the working languages are english, german and french. the eu is not going to stop using english as it dominates out of the three working languages.Except that the individual nations of the EU do not share a common official language. France has French, Spain has Spanish, Italy has Italian, Germany has German, Denmark has Danish etc... Those countries do not have English as their official language. I do not even think a single European Union country has English as their official language.
that joke is old mate, the British are the first to mock themselvesLeaving EU twice in one week has got to be a record
Not as old as the average leave voterthat joke is old mate, the British are the first to mock themselves
That it has another name doesn't mean it isn't the same thing. European Union is a progressed EEC.EEC was is 1957. European Union was not until 1993.
whats wrong with leave votersNot as old as the average leave voter