- The language we use to communicate and then we can understand what the other person is saying or writing and vs. It is not native or local English.
Unless they are studying language, many native speakers are not really aware of what parts of their language are 'local', so it is hard to imagine them using a so-called 'neutral English'.
- is a way of speaking or writing a language without regionalism.
See my previous comment.
- It is a dialect that is mostly used for public usage.
Well, it isn't. In Britain, BBC announcers used to speak RP, which could, I suppose, be termed a 'standard English', but it wasn't neutral. In recent decades, the BBC has moved away from this, and BBC announcers now speak with a fairly wide range of accents.
When we are speaking or performing in a public forum / video station / TV announcement, etc, neutral English should be used to erase regional barriers and communicate effectively with the most people in the world.
First you would have to try to agree on what a neutral English was. Even if you could agree on this, I don't think there are many native speakers who would feel it right that their natural way of speaking should not be considered acceptable in broadcasting[/QUOTE]