Some Aleut communities are Russian Orthodox majority...don't know about the language.
Russian is taught at some schools and universities in Germany, and there are a few immigrants from Russia living there who can speak Russian.
Alaska has some small semiarid regions but no major desert areas.
Alaska has no major true desert regions. It does have large areas of tundra which is similar in some respects to a desert.
They speak Ukrainian as well as Russian.I believe the official language in Ukraine is Ukrainain, but since it used to be part of the Soviet Union everybody speaks Russian as well.In Odessa people mostly speak Russian, but in the West and some North regions people speak Ukrainian. I think it is a pity that ukrainians use Russian very often, i think they have to speak their own language, that was their for hudreds of years. Russia still has a big influence on Ukraine.
No, Serbians do not commonly speak Russian as their primary language. The official language of Serbia is Serbian, which is a South Slavic language. While some Serbians may speak Russian as a second language, it is not widely spoken in the country.
Ruth Gruber could speak English, German, Russian, French, and Italian.
* They mostly speak Japanese, but some can speak Korean, Chinese, and alot can speak English. * and have lots Russian people in the hiz out
Russian! But some regions have their own languages: there're so many of them. But still Russian is the official language in russia.
Viktoria Komova is a Russian gymnast, so her native language is Russian. She may also speak other languages to some extent, such as English or French, as is common among international athletes.
Some do but it is not commonly spoken in Russia.
He had to have spoken at least some Russian, even if not fluently, as he served in the Russian Navy as a Rear Admiral under Empress Catherine II.
Stalin spoke Georgian as his mother tongue as he was from Georgia. He also spoke Russian but it was with a Georgian accent.