There is no such language as Indian. India has over 750 languages, and the Native American tribes also speak about 700 languages.
There is no such language as "Indian."All of the states of India speak different languages. For more information about the languages of India, click here.
"Indian chief" typically refers to Native American tribal leaders, not Indian as in from India. Yiddish is a Jewish language. It is unlikely for an Indian chief to speak Yiddish, as they would likely speak one of the indigenous languages of their tribe.
Spanish (the Romance language spoken in most of Spain and the countries colonized by Spain)
There is no "Indian language." In India, they speak a variety of languages, the most common of which are Hindu and English, but none are called "Indian."
The predominant language of Mexico is Spanish, but there are many people there that can also speak English and American Indian languages, like the Mayan language.
There is no such language called American. There are several languages native to America, notably native American languages.
Both countries speak many languages. Canada has 2 official languages and the US has no official languages.In Canada, the official languages are English and French.In the US, the common languages are English and Spanish.
There are no countries near France that speak ONLY two languages, but all of them speak more than two languages.
No. There is no such language as "Indian."For more information about the 455 languages of India, click here.
There are about 210 countries in the world that speak about 6,800 languages. For a complete survey of all the languages of the world by country, see Ethnologue.
Father Jacques Marquette, a French Jesuit missionary and explorer, was known to speak several Native American languages, primarily those of the tribes he interacted with, such as the Algonquin and Huron languages. While the exact number of languages he spoke is not definitively documented, it is believed that he was proficient in at least two or three languages to effectively communicate with various Indigenous groups during his explorations in the 17th century.