Translation: Me gusta hablar idiomas diferentes.
Bolivia speaks about 45 different languages, including Spanish. The Spanish in Bolivia is a different dialect than the standard Spanish of Spain, but a person from Bolivia can easily understand a person from Spain.For more information about all the languages of Bolivia, click here.
Spanish is spanish, just like English is English. In Britain, they speak english, though they do it very differently than the English of the United States. Similarly, Spanish has differences based upon the location, Mexico, Europe, Argentina, etc. So no, it is not a different language, just a different custom of speaking, different dialect, etc.
texeallion English and SPANISHEnglish, but many people speak Spanish or are bilingual.English...technically they still spaek English there but you will find many spanish speaking people thereEnglish mostly, like the rest of the United States. Because it borders Mexico, there is also a large amount of Spanish spoken there too. Of coarse there are other languages spoken there to besides those, but those two are the major ones.
Yes, of course. The Spaniards shipped slaves from Africa to most if not all of their colonies! This is the reason why there are black Cubans who speak perfect spanish, much like the french-speaking blacks in Hati.
Unofficial languages spoken in Haiti include:Haitian Sign LanguageAmerican Sign LanguageSpanishEnglishHaitian Vodoun Culture LanguageMacorix languageMcConnell–Laubach orthographyTaíno languageFor all of the languages of Haiti, click here.
Londres is the Spanish way of calling London, London! Pronouncing London in Spanish makes the word London sound like Londres. So Spanish speaking people refer to the capitol of the UK as Londres.
No, most countries with large Spanish-speaking populations also have smaller populations that speak other languages. In today's global society most countries host immigrants from other places who still speak their mother tongue in addition to the new country's language. Additionally, many more people are educated to speak a second language in addition to Spanish. In all Spanish-speaking countries in Central and South American there are indigenous populations whose languages were supplanted by Spanish when the countries were conquered. Major examples of this would be Quechua, Armaya, and Nahuatl. And in northern Spain, there is an ethic group that speaks a language known as Basque (which is also what the people are called).
Geez, an ancient Ethiopian script, was not integrated with languages like English, French, or Spanish as those languages have different writing systems and phonetic sounds that are not aligned with the Geez script.
The most common currency used in Spanish-speaking countries is the peso. However, some countries like Spain, which uses the euro, and others like Panama, which uses the balboa, have their own unique currencies.
there aer lots of different languages in Europe like English, German and Spanish but there is an European language.
Romance languages are languages that are descended from Latin, the language of the Romans. You can see the etymological similarity between the words "Roman" and "romance.'' The grammar and vocabulary of all romance languages comes from Latin. This is because after the Roman Empire collapsed, Latin-speaking people from different regions of Europe fell out of touch with one another. The Latin that was spoken in northern France began to develop different pronunciation from, say, the Latin spoken in southern Italy. Eventually, differences in pronunciation and syntax became so different that "Latin" speaking peoples were in reality no longer speaking Latin, but new languages. The most spoken romance languages are (not in order) Spanish, French, Italian, Portuguese, Romanian, and Catalan. There are dozens of others with smaller numbers of speakers like Galician, Occitan, Piedmontese, Romansch, and Sicilian. The speakers of these less significant languages are almost always bilingual with the official language(s) of their respective countries.
English.English!Most people in America speak English. However, there are some Spanish-speaking people, some Asian people from various countries, some Hebrew-speaking people, some German-speaking people ... in other words, just like the rest of America!