Yes. Guyana is the only nation, but it is also spoken on the Falkland Islands (off the coast of Argentina).
In Central American, English is spoken in Belize. In North America, it is spoken in Canada, the United States of America and a number of Caribbean islands.
No. Most people in South America speak Spanish, followed by Portuguese. There are three countries that do not speak Portuguese or Spanish, which are English Guyana, French Guiana, Dutch Suriname.
Guyana. (If you include Central America, Belize also speaks English)
it is Guyana but some of them speak English and some of them speak guyanaese
Except for Brazil, Suriname, Guiana, and French Guyana, all other countries are spanish speaking ones.
Some do, if they learn it in school.
Yes, in most of South America
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, approximately 96% of Americans speak English.
American English
Most Asian Americans speak English.
80% of Americans aged five and older speak only English at home.
English. They speak English. Like Americans.
The majority of South Koreans speak Korean as their primary language. There are also minority languages spoken by ethnic groups such as Chinese, English, and Japanese due to immigration and international connections.
No. Languages spoken in Latin America include Spanish, French and Portuguese. People who speak English are known as Anglo-Americans.
Mostly American English.
hear americans talk mess
Squanto had the ability to speak English at a time when very few Native Americans could not. Today almost all Native Americans in the United States and Cananda can speak English.
Hispanic-Americans speak Spanish and English. Hispanic people are language-defined, for they speak Spanish as native language. (Simply learning fluent Spanish, does NOT magically turn you Hispanic!) Some Americans who are descendants of Hispanics don't speak Spanish anymore, so they just speak English as their active tongues.
Most South Africans speak English. You should be fine.