English, cantonese, spanish, french and Arabic
The Qur'an has been translated into hundreds of languages and is available in practically every language with more than 5 million speakers.
No, there are more English speakers in Canada than Spanish speakers in the US. English is one of the official languages of Canada and is spoken by the majority of the population. While Spanish is widely spoken in the US, it is not the most prevalent language.
The term multilingual can refer to an individual speaker who uses two or more languages, a community of speakers in which two or more languages are used, or speakers of different languages.
A dead language is one with no native speakers. Of the three mentioned in this question, only Latin is a dead language: Greek has more than 12 million native speakers, mostly living in Greece. Hebrew has more than 5 million native speakers, mostly living in Israel.
English is more widely spoken as a first language, with approximately 360 million native speakers. However, Spanish is more widely spoken overall, including second language speakers, with around 460 million speakers worldwide.
for native languages, just speak more;for foreign languages, you should read more and listen more and try to talk with the native speakers more often
English is one of the official languages of India, spoken well by more than 100 million people.There are more speakers of Indian English than British English.
No, not by far, there are approximately 1.1 billion mandarin/Chinese speakers worldwide, and around 300 million Spanish speakers, there are also 330 million English speakers.
As of 2011, there are only 11 languages with more than 100 million native speakers: Mandarin Spanish English Hindi-Urdu Arabic Bengali Portuguese Russian Japanese Punjabi German (borderline)
One disadvantage of Esperanto is its limited number of speakers compared to more widely spoken languages. Some people also criticize Esperanto for not having a rich cultural history or literature compared to national languages. Additionally, there may be limited resources available for learning Esperanto compared to more mainstream languages.
Yes. Even though the total native speakers of both those languages added together don't equal the number of native speakers of Mandarin Chinese, they are the second and third most-spoken languages in the world as a first language. This isn't even taking into account the number of second-language speakers (that's about 900 million, again, both languages taken together).
Portuguese, Spanish, and English are languages number eight, four, and three respectively in number of native speakers. Portugese has 175 native speakers. Spanish has 350-400 million native speakers. English has 500 million native speakers. So, total, they have 1.025 billion native speakers. Assuming a world population of 6.7 billion (20 million higher than an August 14th estimate.) So, together about 15.3% of the population have one of those three as a native language. And I think that it's worth mentioning that the Chinese dialects have more speakers than those three combined. So, if you master their script, and speak those three languages, you could communicate with 30%+ of the world (+ because have these as second languages with various levels of fluency, which is why they are not counted in those figures.)