The US Virgin Islands are a group of Caribbean Islands that are an insular area of the United States. The islands are divided into three districts and those three districts are divided into twenty sub-districts.
The Spanish-speaking Caribbean islands are:CubaPuerto Rico (U.S. Commonwealth that has both Spanish & English as official languages)Dominican RepublicAll other Caribbean islands do not have Spanish as an official language, but many of them still understand it or have a majority population that use it as a second language.
The sentence should be capitalized like this: You met many English-speaking Russians on your trip.
Spanish-speaking countries of Central America are Guatemala, Nicaragua, Honduras, El Salvador, Costa Rica and Panama. The only official language of Belize is English, but Spanish is widely used and officially recognized as a regional language. In the Caribbean: Cuba and the Dominican Republic. Puerto Rico is also Spanish-speaking but is a territory of the United States. The islands of San Andres and Providencia are part of Colombia, which is Spanish-speaking, but most residents speak a creole language which is English-based but which has many Spanish loanwords. Spanish is an official language of Trinidad and Tobago but is not a majority language there. Papiamento, a Spanish-based creole language, is official in Aruba and the Netherlands Antilles, which are both Dutch territories in the Caribbean.
There are no statistics on this.
3: Cuba, Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico Note: Puerto Rico is a commonwealth of the United States, it is not a country.
Republics
There are many English Speaking islands in the Caribbean. Some examples are; Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, Grenada, Barbados, St. Vincent and the Grenadines etc.
Lots of people in the Caribbean speak English and it is an official language in many islands there, but not everyone speaks English in the Caribbean.
The Spanish-speaking Caribbean islands are:CubaPuerto Rico (U.S. Commonwealth that has both Spanish & English as official languages)Dominican RepublicAll other Caribbean islands do not have Spanish as an official language, but many of them still understand it or have a majority population that use it as a second language.
many
There are several different native languages and forms of Patois in the Caribbean, but English as a second language is very popular there and throughout many parts of the world.
how are you
The sentence should be capitalized like this: You met many English-speaking Russians on your trip.
All of them. They All Speak A Type of ENGLISH!
Howrse and Babydow are English speaking Owlient games.
Spanish-speaking countries of Central America are Guatemala, Nicaragua, Honduras, El Salvador, Costa Rica and Panama. The only official language of Belize is English, but Spanish is widely used and officially recognized as a regional language. In the Caribbean: Cuba and the Dominican Republic. Puerto Rico is also Spanish-speaking but is a territory of the United States. The islands of San Andres and Providencia are part of Colombia, which is Spanish-speaking, but most residents speak a creole language which is English-based but which has many Spanish loanwords. Spanish is an official language of Trinidad and Tobago but is not a majority language there. Papiamento, a Spanish-based creole language, is official in Aruba and the Netherlands Antilles, which are both Dutch territories in the Caribbean.
yes their are many