- dialects
- standard-language
- linguistic-diversity
- heritage-language
Why Dialects Deserve the Same Respect as Standard Languages
- Author
- Door Christian Rajab Zadeh
- Published
- Reading time
- 4 min leestijd
Dialects are often dismissed as “incorrect” or “broken” language. But a dialect is a complete linguistic system, and the line between a language and a dialect is drawn by history and power — not grammar. Why dialect diversity deserves the same respect as any standard language.
Ask someone what a language is, and the answer often seems straightforward.
- English
- German
- Arabic
- Spanish
But when we look closer, things become far more complex.
Within each of these languages exist countless regional varieties, local speech forms, and dialects that reflect the history and identity of the communities that speak them.
Yet despite this richness, dialects are often treated as something lesser.
They are described as:
- “incorrect”
- “broken”
- “informal”
- “uneducated”
- or simply “not proper language”
But is that really true?
What Is a Dialect?
Many people assume that a dialect is simply a flawed version of a standard language.
Linguists generally see things very differently.
A dialect is not a mistake.
A dialect is a complete linguistic system with its own:
- vocabulary
- pronunciation
- grammar patterns
- expressions
- cultural references
In other words, dialects are not failed languages.
They are languages as they are actually spoken by real communities.
The Difference Between Language and Dialect Is Not Always Linguistic
One of the most surprising things about language is that the distinction between a language and a dialect is often shaped by history, politics, and society — not purely by linguistics.
Many varieties classified as dialects are highly distinct.
Meanwhile, some officially recognized languages are mutually intelligible to a remarkable degree.
The famous saying often attributed to linguist Max Weinreich captures this reality:
“A language is a dialect with an army and a navy.”
While simplified, the quote highlights an important truth:
Recognition is often determined by power and institutions, not by linguistic complexity.
Standard Languages Serve a Purpose
This is not an argument against standard languages.
Standardization can be incredibly useful.
It helps with:
- education
- publishing
- administration
- communication across regions
Standard forms make it easier for large numbers of people to communicate and learn together.
The problem begins when standardization becomes hierarchy.
When people start believing that one form is inherently superior to all others.
The Hidden Cost of Dialect Stigma
Throughout history, many communities have been encouraged — or pressured — to abandon their dialects.
Children were often taught that speaking their local variety was embarrassing or incorrect.
In some cases, people stopped passing dialects to younger generations because they believed it would improve social mobility or integration.
The consequences can be significant.
When a dialect disappears, communities often lose:
- local stories
- oral traditions
- unique expressions
- historical knowledge
- cultural identity
What disappears is not only language.
A particular way of seeing the world disappears with it.
Dialects Carry History
Every dialect tells a story.
Words reveal migration patterns.
Pronunciation reflects historical contact between communities.
Expressions preserve traditions that may not exist anywhere else.
This is especially visible in languages such as Romanes.
Different Romanes dialects contain traces of centuries of movement across Europe and beyond.
Influences from Greek, Slavic, Romance, Germanic, and other languages can often be found within different communities.
Each dialect acts like a historical record.
Not written in books, but carried by people.
Why This Matters for Heritage Speakers
For many heritage speakers, dialects are deeply personal.
The way a grandparent speaks.
The words used at family gatherings.
The expressions heard during childhood.
These are often not standardized forms.
They are community forms.
Family forms.
Living forms.
When language learning tools focus exclusively on a single standard variety, heritage learners can sometimes feel disconnected from the language they actually know.
They may recognize pieces of it — but not the version being taught.
That is why dialect representation matters.
Technology Has Often Favored Standardization
Modern technology has made language learning more accessible than ever before.
But technology has also inherited many of the biases that exist in traditional language education.
Most language apps focus on:
- one standard form
- one pronunciation model
- one “correct” answer
This approach works well for some situations.
But it does not reflect the reality of many languages around the world.
Dialect diversity is often simplified away because it is easier to build software that way.
The result is that many communities never see their own speech represented.
Building Technology That Respects Variation
One of the guiding principles behind the Romanes app and Dialect Atlas is that variation should not be hidden.
It should be acknowledged and explored.
Instead of asking:
Which dialect is correct?
A more useful question is:
How do different communities express the same idea?
That shift changes everything.
It transforms dialects from a problem to solve into a source of knowledge.
And it allows learners to appreciate linguistic diversity rather than fear it.
Respect Does Not Require Uniformity
Respecting dialects does not mean rejecting standard languages.
Both have value.
Both serve important purposes.
The goal is not to eliminate standards.
The goal is to recognize that linguistic diversity deserves space alongside them.
A language becomes richer when its varieties are visible.
Not hidden.
Not corrected away.
Not treated as lesser.
Looking Ahead
The world contains thousands of dialects, many of which are rarely represented in modern technology.
Some are spoken by millions.
Others by only a few communities.
But every dialect represents generations of human experience.
Every dialect carries stories, memories, and identities that cannot be fully replaced once lost.
That is why preserving dialect diversity matters.
Not because dialects belong in museums.
But because they belong in everyday life.
They deserve to be spoken.
They deserve to be learned.
And they deserve the same respect as any standard language.
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