French, German, Portuguese for example.
Operas have been written in most all languages on Earth, primarily the European, Asian and English languages.
Operas can be written in any language, but most great western operas are in Italian, German, or French, though there are some great English and Russian works. Those five languages should cover the most common opera repertoire, but lots of contemporary operas are being written in less common languages, even Klingon and Esperanto, or even a mix of languages.
There have been a few operas that have been written in English, but the majority by far of them have been written in other languages, most notably Italian.
No. Operas have been written in virtually every language.
Many operas have been adapted for this instrument. Notably, however, the Phantom of the Opera features an organ written into the score.
I believe they are: Spanish, Italian and German 2nd answer: The main operatic languages are Italian, French and German. There have been Spanish operas, just as there have been in English, Polish, Hungarian, Russian and many other languages; but not as many as in the three main languages.
It is not possible to know. Hundreds, at least.
Bleach is in Japanese but it has been translated into different languages and has been subtitled.
There are about 450 Languages spoken in India and about 700 different Native American languages. But there is no such language as "Indian".
You'll have to be more specific. Which version of the Bible are you referring to? The King James Bible has been translated into over 1200 different languages over the past 400 years.
80 different languages. :) :) :) :)
The bible has been written in many different languages. It is also composed of many different books, all originating from different areas.