Lithuanian language is the oficial language of Lithuania. Is one of the two surviving members of the Baltic language group, and one of the oldest in Europe. Most young people speaks English very well, and many above 30 also understand Russian. There are several minorities, such as Poles (6.3%) and Russians (5.1%). In this cases sometimes parents don't speak fluent Lithuanian but children do.
Lithuanian schools teach English as a first foreign language, but some older people took German at school.
Lithuanian government is tolerant with minoritarian languages and there are schools where Russian and Polish are the primary languages of education in the areas populated by these minorities. But among lithuanians, Russian and Polish languages is not fashinable at all right now.
Answer
The official language of Lithuania is Lithuanian. According to the Lithuanian population census of 2001, about 84% of the country's population speak Lithuanian as their native language, 8.2% are native speakers of Russian, and 5.8% speak Polish.
Answer
Lithuanians speak Lithuanian. According to the Lithuanian population census of 2001, about 84% of the country's population speak Lithuanian as their native language, 8.2% are the native speakers of Russian, 5.8% - of Polish.
lithuanian is one of the oldest languages in Europe. This is
evidenced by its having the strongest element of Sanscrit (from north east India) of any European language. Sanskrit formed the basis of all European languages, with the possible exception of Basque, whose origins no one yet knows. Lithuanian is closely related to Latvian, both of whose peoples are kinown as Balts.
Lithuanian the official state language of Lithuania and is recognized as one of the official languages of the European Union.
Lithuanian.
Lithuanian.
The major languages spoken in Lithuania apart from Lithuanian would be Russian and Polish.
The two official languages spoken in Belarus are Belarusian (36.7%) and Russian (62.8%). these figures are for 1999.
The remaining 0.5% is essentially Polish and Ukrainian.
They speak Belarusian and Russian
Most Belarusians either speak Russian or Belarusian. (63% of the population speaks Russian as their everyday language. 2000 census)
The official languages of Belarus are Russian and Belarussian.
Russian and Belarusian.
Belarussian
Russian (spoken by 63% of the population- 2000 census)
The 2 official languages spoken in Belarus are
The most widely spoken languages of Belarus (in order) are:
Trasianka is a form of mixed speech in which Belarusian and Russian elements and structures alternate in rapid succession.
Minority languages include:
The 1 official language of Lithuania is called Lithuanianor lietuvių kalba, spoken by more than 80% of the population.
Here is a list of major languages spoken in Lithuania:
Note: About 37% of the population of Lithuania speak at least two foreign languages
Russian is the most common language in Belarus, followed by Belarusian:
Hello:
For the languages of Belarus, click here.For the languages of Kazakhstan, click here.
Languages that are spoken
A constructed language like Klingon or Esperanto would not typically be used in vernacular literature because they are not widely spoken or recognized as natural languages. vernacular literature usually refers to works written in widely spoken languages like English, Spanish, or Mandarin.
No. More than 200 languages are spoken.
Many languages are not spoken in India, including:HebrewFilipinoHawaiianTlingitNavahoXhosaZulu
There are currently 6,909 languages spoken in the world :)
Uzbek,Turkmen,Kazakh, Languages spoken in Turkistan
There are roughly 6,500 languages spoken today!
The languages spoken in Wallonia are French and German.
The same languages spoken today were spoken in World War 2.
Dari and Pashto are the two official languages. A number of turkic languages are also spoken.
Both languages are spoken in Asia