Not very many people speak Aramaic ... so, no.
english
there is no word in the English language to replace we
There have already been many in the past and there will certainly be many in the future as social, technological, economic, religious, etc. conditions evolve and different cultures and languages rise to dominance in the world. English is as transient an international language as Greek, Latin, French, and German were before it over the past 2000+ years. It is impossible to determine at this time what will replace it and when, but something will. It also is not something that can be decided on, all such deliberate attempts to either create (e.g. Esperanto) or legislate an international language have failed and always will fail, as people will use language as they choose.
search a sds_en file and replace the sds_ru in mafia folder section pc
Pronouns are used to replace nouns in sentences. This is helpful to make things not sound repetitive. Some examples of pronouns are he, she, it, they, and we.
Possible, yes. Probable, no. Languages with a large number of speakers have a far lower likelihood of dying out, particularly when they have around 100 million speakers (that would be a bit on the low side for German). At that point, they have a high amount of inertia, so even if the international climate were to change to the point where German was spoken by fewer and fewer people, it would still take a very long time to be replaced. And the German people are extremely proud of their native language, which makes them even less likely to replace it with English (the same goes for other languages, English is seen as being a bit of an upstart language).
Hopefully
If by language you mean the Russian voice over than yes. It is an option in the sounds area of the options menu. It will be the option MP voiceover (?) and it will have the option "Localized" or "English". Switch it to English and you're all good
customs court
customs court
Dial the UK mobile number in full international format: replace the trunk prefix 0 with telephone country code +44 (including the plus symbol).
International country code for South Korea is +82. Replace + with 011 if calling from US/Canada Replace + with 00 if calling from Europe.