What languages do people in your country speak?
What languages do people in your country speak?
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Belgium
100% french ofc
mongolian
Why don't you speak Belgian
Dutch, Frisian and English
Why would we speak a non existent language?
Same
probably some mix of Sumerian and Urartian
Basé et érablepilé
english
french
inuktitut (and a fuckload of other indigenous languages)
canadian ukrainian (still a couple thousand native speakers)
canadian gaelic (same)
Spanish.
100% Japanese.
the tunisian darijaa
العربيّة
le francais
english
one of many other languages if one chooses the language option for the baccalauréat
Español, señor.
Jafacian
Because you're a non existent country
racial minority (like chechens, bashkirs and other churkas) people speak their ovn languages. On average people speak only russian and some pigin english. Also some really old people might speak some simple german
American and Mexican
I don't know them all. There are shitton of them.
>also some really old people might speak some simple german
Do volga germans not know how to reproduce?
They don't know why they should
Our own german dialects, which are highly unintelligible with standard german by the way, we also learn how to speak standard german in school and some places in the east have a native slovenian and croatian speaking population of a few thousand
arabic
good post
Spanish
English exclusively.
Portuguese.
Some small cities in south speak german too.
Russian
Arabic
English
Yiddish
Fr*nch
Amhari
Japanese Only
English. Soon Arabic. It was a good run.
In Mexico we speak mexican.
Mostly, Spanish but also minor indigenous languages and English-based creole on some islands.
There are native languages here spoken by few
>The population speaks or signs approximately 210 languages, of which 180 are indigenous.[6] Less than forty thousand people actually speak any one of the indigenous languages in the Brazilian territory.[7]
Hundreds of them, maybe more.
Spanish and Guaraní
chinese
maori
various island niggerspeak
English, second most spoken is Mandarin I think and there's still a decent amount of Greek and Italian speakers and then other stuff like Vietnamese and Hindi. There's also a bunch of indigenous languages, though they're fading.
Spanish and native languages.
Even thought this brown shithole ranks high on the English learners scale less than 3% of the population speaks English (fluent English).
Officially portuguese, most people can't speak it properly though.
Some german in isolated cities
So basically what your saying is Portuguese is the official language there but not many people no how to speak it right?
What's important is that we can communicate with each other
Among amerindians, over 60 languages are spoken.
The rest varely speak Sp*nish.
Some English is spoken in San Andres, but I don't know how good it is.
Albanian and portugese
Hebrew and Russian
French, exclusively. The truth is that the French nation could, in theory, be reduced to the lands in blue. But French people have the conqueror gene.
We just had to go and subjugate Alsacians, Basques, Bretons, Catalans, Corsicans, Flemings and Occitans, eventually forcing them to speak our language. And I believe that's a beautiful thing.
No, he is one those retarded prescriptivists. Don't you think it's absurd what he is saying? What he is saying is that when we speak we don't follow the formal Portuguese, the one that is used in the Bible or literature.
en.wikipedia.org
continuation:
>The linguistic situation of the BP informal speech in relation to the standard language is controversial. There are authors (Bortoni, Kato, Mattos e Silva, Bagno, Perini) who describe it as a case of diglossia, considering that informal BP has developed – both in phonetics and grammar – in its own particular way.
>Accordingly, the formal register of Brazilian Portuguese has a written and spoken form. The written formal register (FW) is used in almost all printed media and written communication, is uniform throughout the country and is the "Portuguese" officially taught at school. The spoken formal register (FS) is essentially a phonetic rendering of the written form. (FS) is used in very formal situations, such as speeches or ceremonies or when reading directly out of a text. While (FS) is necessarily uniform in lexicon and grammar, it shows noticeable regional variations in pronunciation.
spanish and native languages
hebrew and yiddish
Of course Indonesian, but people sometimes use local language as well.
We speak our own shit.
>What he is saying is that when we speak we don't follow the formal Portuguese, the one that is used in the Bible or literature.
I wish. Most brazilians don't know how to write it either.
chinese
we speak our heritage's languages. lots of them. too many to list here.
>Our language.
No. This is Rome's language. Romans had a conqueror mindset.
French are a mix of germanics(the franks themselves) and many former celts. Your people just gave up your own culture and adopted another
That explains a lot. It didn't make a lot of sense to me what he was saying. That is why I asked the question. Thanks for information.
You think it's strange that indonesians don't immigrate en masse to Australia the same way mexicans do to the U.S? What keeps them there?
It is not truly indonesian it is more like indonesianized malay
Russian + minorities languages.
English and French
French is a mandatory class in primary schools.
Based Leader Xi? Is that u?
Español
Fenya
just spanish
natives couldnt talk straight so we ended them
türkçe
Unironically murder yourself filthy Walloon