It is Portugal and Brazil. Brazil is the only country in s. America where Portuguese is the main language. Everyone else speaks Spanish (blame the conquistadors).
Monolingual countries are rare. The only countries I can think of that speak Arabic and nothing else are (if you don't count small numbers of immigrants who speak their native languages):BahrainSaudi Arabia
You can ask questions in any language you can type in. After you ask, just place the question in the "Languages and Cultures" category, and hopefully someone else that speaks that language will find it and answer it. If there are enough questions in a certain language, we'll make a separate category for it.
Essentially, everyone speaks with an accent. We only say its an accent because its different from how we talk. So yes, because everyone on earth speaks with an accent. If they speak in a language other than their original, that is. Unless they learn the second language at a very young age.
You should always speak the common language of the place you work. If your native language is different than the common language, it is counterproductive and rude to speak it at work.
The rule of thumb is that if there is a common language that everyone speaks (such as English), all professional communication must be in that language only. Anything else would be considered rude and/or counter-productive.
talks poorly about someone.
Simply just study and study and study and study and nothing else
History is the simple answer. New Zealand has three official languages, Maori, English and New Zealand Sign language. Some early settlers spoke Gaelic, French, Norwegian, Danish, and Chinese. The image of the Tower of Babel (albeit apocryphal) is warning enough.
Find someone else, be on the lookout for other guys.
The same thing "each" indicates to anyone else who speaks English.
Royal Mail, centered in London, delivers to anywhere in England, as wells as almost anywhere else. They should ship to any country where speaking English is a secondary language.