No. It has always been English.
In respect of a country, an alien language is a language to that country would be one that is not an official language of the country or one that is not spoken by natives of that country.
Brazil's official language is Portuguese. It is the only Portuguese-speaking country in South America.
You would be in Suriname.
That would have to be Switzerland, sir.
Wales would be the most likely country to hear a Celtic language being spoken.
In most cases, I believe that it means the same thing. A national language would be the language spoken by most of the people; an official language would be the language designated by a government body as the national language and may be required to be taught in the schools. The official language is usually the language spoken by most of the people.
President Arroyo can't change the official Fillipino language as it would have to involve a mandate from the people, to change part of the country's constitution. Fillipino has been the Official language since it was mandated by the constitution in 1987.
If you are talking about South America like I am learning in history the answer would be Guyana.
Because English is the only official language in the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago.
If you mean central North America then it would be English, but if you mean central South America, and Brazil is the most central to the country then I would suggest language of Brazil or even Spanish.
The royal court typically spoke the language of the ruling class or the official language of the country. For example, in medieval England, they would have spoken Middle English, while in France, they would have spoken French.
You would simply say, "How are you today? My name is Rebecca."Although Australia has no official language, English is the default language throughout the country.