There is no one language that all Europeans speak. There are around 50 countries in Europe, with many national languages and people from other parts of the world living in Europe while speaking their own native language from their home countries. Some of the main languages in Europe include French, Spanish, English, German, Italian, Dutch, Polish, Russian, Greek and many, many more.
The most widely spoken language in Europe is English.
The most common spoken language in Europe is Russian, with approximately 120 million native speakers.
Russian is the most common language in Europe, mainly due to the native speaking population (about 120,000,000 in recognized European boundaries alone). German is the next most common language, and is known by over half of all EU citizens. However, English is pretty much tied with German in number of speakers, and is spoken by almost half of EU citizens as well. Today, the most important languages of Europe are German and English, due to their power and influence throughout the continent and the world. French is also a common language, although not as popular as German or English.
The Balto-Slavic language family.
English is the most widely spoken.
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As of the end of 2013, Volkswagen was the most popular car in Europe. ?æIt is also the largest car manufacturer in Europe.
The most common languages in Western Europe are:EnglishIrishWelshScottish GaelicFrenchSpanishBasquePortugueseCatalanOccitanItalianGermanDutch/FlemishSwedishDanishNorwegian BokmalNorwegian NynorskIcelandicFrisianFinnishLuxembourgishRomaniYiddish
The two most widely spoken languages in Europe today are English and French. English is commonly used as a second language across many European countries, while French is an official language in several countries and is widely spoken in parts of Western Europe.
The most common language group in Northern Europe is the Germanic language group, which includes languages such as Danish, Swedish, Norwegian, Icelandic, and Faroese. These languages are spoken by millions of people in countries like Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Iceland, and parts of Finland.
Russian is the most commonly spoken Language in Europe.
By native speakers, it is German. By total speakers, it is English.
Germanic languages (Danish, Faroese, Icelandic, Norwegian, and Swedish) are the most common language group in Northern Europe, one of only two. The other is Uralic (Finnish and Sami).