On one hand, I understand that this is inevitable. No language can be spoken forever, and unless there is a reason to communicate in a language, it will evaporate. This is a natural consequence of increasing communication between nations which are searching for a standard language with which to use.<p>On the other hand, there is a certain emptiness associated with a language which is no longer spoken, entombed in books. My inner linguist laments the death of these obscure languages and dialects.<p>I won't grieve <i>too</i> much, for as language evolves, communication between humans is facilitated. As most people will only feel comfortable learning one, maybe two languages, why not learn the ones most spoken? Of <i>course</i> languages are going to "go extinct," that is the nature of their evolution: survival of the fittest.