Not necessarily. Bilingual refers to a person who speaks two languages. A multilingual person would have a second language - and a third!
Bilingual education involves educating students in their native language and a second language. They learn academic skills in their native language and transfer them to a secondary language like English.
The percentage(say:purr-sen-tayj)of mexico(say:meh-sick-oh)is called"Spanish"that is bilingual(say:bill-and-juole)
English. Most Argentineans speak English as a second language and German, Portuguese and french as a third language if they go to a bilingual school
H. P. Edwards has written: 'Evaluation of second language programs' -- subject(s): Bilingual Education, Education, Bilingual, English speakers, French language, Study and teaching
The first language is important in bilingual education because it serves as the foundation for learning a second language. It helps students develop cognitive skills, maintain cultural identity, and improve academic performance in both languages.
Bilingual means you can speak two languages so you become bilingual by learning another language.
Not that I'm aware of, bilingual says it best.
People are bilingual not countries. The official language of Romania is Romanian.
Jennifer C. Gage has written: 'Longitudinal studies in second language learning and bilingual education' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Bilingualism, Language and languages, Second language acquisition, Study and teaching
There are an infinite amount of reasons to learn a second language. Not only will it open up your social circle, it will improve your career opportunities. Learning a new language also makes you smarter, it improves your cognition and recall.
language, bilingual
A native language is a language that you learn after you born and second language can be described as a language that you learn after your learn your native language. It is also possible that you can be a bilingual speaker.