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The South American countries where Spanish, Portuguese, and English are spoken are Brazil; Argentina and Uruguay; Bolivia and Paraguay; and The Co-operative Republic of Guyana and Venezuela.
No, there are many different languages spoken in South America. While Spanish may be the official language of most South American countries. Brazilian Portuguese is the most commonly-spoken language on the continent. Portuguese, Spanish, French, Quechua, Aymara, Guaraní, Italian, English, German, Dutch, Japanese and many more are other languages spoken in South America.
Quechua, the language of the Incas, is spoken in the Andes Mountains region of Bolivia, Peru and Chile, as is Aymara. Today, dialects of Quechua are spoken by more people in South America than any other language indigenous to that continent.
go on to this website i found (but i forget what it was) and it has a table, Quechua on one side, English to tell what it means on the other
Gary John Parker has written: 'Ayacucho Quechua grammar and dictionary' -- subject(s): Ayacucho, Dialects, Dictionaries, English, Quechua language 'Diccionario quechua, Ancash-Huailas' -- subject(s): Dialects, Dictionaries, Quechua, Quechua language, Spanish, Spanish language 'Sugerencias para un alfabeto general del quechua' -- subject(s): Alphabet, Quechua language
The primary languages spoken in America are English and Spanish. However, due to its diverse population, many other languages are also spoken throughout the country, reflecting its multicultural character.
Portuguese has the most native speakers, but is mainly spoken in Brazil. Spanish is the most widely spoken language across the continent.Some other languages spoken in the continent include English, Dutch, French, the Quechualanguages and Guarani.Most countries in South America have Spanish as an official language. Brazil covers about half the continent and has Portuguese as an official language. A few countries have French or English as official languages. Nearly all South American countries also officially recognize a variety of native American languages is specific regions or nationally.they speak spanishSpanish, Portuguese, Dutch, FrenchThe five languages spoken in South America are: Portuguese, Spanish, English, Dutch and French.No. Spanish is the most commonly spoken language. Out of the 13 countries in South America (Argentina, Bolivia, Brasil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, French Guyana, Guyana, Peru, Paraguay, Suriname, Uruguay and Venezuela), 9 speak Spanish. Of course they have other native languages and dialects but Spanish is the official and most used language.The 4 non-spanish speaking countries are: Brasil (Portuguese), French Guyana (French), Suriname (Dutch) and Guyana (English), but these last three territories have a very small population.Spanish an Portuguese are the most commonSpanish and portugueseThere are more than 200 languages spoken in South America, including:SpanishPortugueseDutchFrenchEnglishQuechuaGuaraniThe majority of People in South America live in Brazil, where Portuguese is spoken.Since South America is a continent and not one country, several languages are spoken. Spanish dominates but Portuguese, English, Dutch and French are spoken in South America.It depends on what you mean. Portuguese is spoken by more people in South America than any other Language. Spanish is the most WIDELY spoken language.Official languages are:- In Brazil - Portugese. Elsewhere - Spanish.
The 9 major languages in South America are Aymara, Dutch, English, French, Guaraní, Papiamento, Portuguese, Quechua and Spanish. There are many other minor languages spoken by native tribes though.
parlanki inglesta kanki? ingles is borrowed from spanish meaning English
There are approximately 350 languages spoken in South America (and 1500 at the time of the first European contact): Here is a partial list: English Spanish Latin Portuguese Guyana Dutch Haitian Creole English Jamaican Patois Huilliche Kakauhua Kunza Mapudungun Qawasqar Quechua, Chilean Rapa Nui Yámana Araona Aymara Aymara, Central Ayoreo Baure Callawalla Canichana Cavineña Cayubaba Chácobo Chipaya Chiquitano Chorote, Iyo'wujwa Ese Ejja Guaraní, Eastern Bolivian Guaraní, Western Bolivian Guarayu Ignaciano Itene Itonama Jorá Leco Machinere Movima Pacahuara Pauserna Plautdietsch Quechua, North Bolivian Quechua, South Bolivian Reyesano Saraveca Shinabo Sirionó Spanish Tacana Tapieté Toba Toromono Trinitario Tsimané Uru Wichí Lhamtés Nocten Yaminahua Yuqui Yuracare
South America
In Spanish: el ombligo del mundo In English: the navel of the world