If you're talking about the region of the land of Israel, Hebrew and Old Canaanite were spoken before Aramaic.
Not very many people speak Aramaic ... so, no.
The official language of Ethiopia is Amharic, not Aramaic.
No actually the language that Jesus spoke was Aramaic.
A:The language spoken by Palestinian Jews in the first century was Aramaic, so the apostle John would have spoken Aramaic.
The Armenians always spoke only Armenian as mother tongue, though have used Aramaic and other languages (dominantly Greek and Assyrian) for writing before the Armenian alphabet was invented. There was no written Armenian language before year 405.
He spoke Aramaic, but also Hebrew and Greek.
Aramaic is a Semitic language that originated in the Near East and was commonly spoken in ancient times. It is not the same as English, which belongs to the Germanic language family. English developed from a mixture of languages, including Old English, Latin, and French, and its origins trace back to the 5th century.
Most scholars believe that Jesus spoke Aramaic, not Armenian.
In Ctesiphon, an ancient city in present-day Iraq, the people would have likely spoken Aramaic, which was a commonly used language in the region during that time.
There are currently estimated to be around 200,000 people who speak various dialects of Aramaic worldwide. Most speakers are found in communities in Syria, Iraq, Turkey, and Iran.
The Assyrian language as you call it does not exist. The Ancient Assyrians are extinct and the language they spoke was Akkadian. The people that call themselves Assyrian today are actually of Aramean heritage and the language they all speak is forms of Aramaean/Aramaic and nothing else.
No African country speaks Aramaic as a primary language. Aramaic is a Semitic language that originated in the Near East and is primarily spoken in parts of the Middle East. It is not a language commonly spoken in Africa.