• scarabic@lemmy.world
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    18 hours ago

    Forgive me but I wanted to nitpick all those examples

    Cantonese is not a dialect of Madarin. It’s a distinct language, just a smaller one.

    Standard Arabic is not actually spoken anywhere, and is primarily a written form. Egyptian pronunciations ARE commonly taught, not only because Egypt is big but because, with Egypt’s large entertainment sector, they have exported their pronunciations around the world in TV and movies.

    British English is taught largely as a colonial legacy, not because England predates the US and Australia in history and is therefore considered “standard.”

    While all of these secondary examples are flawed, IMO, I believe you’re actually right about Castilian Spanish. It’s simply more of an individual case than part of a common pattern.