Chileans speak Spanish as their official language. However, there are also indigenous languages spoken by certain indigenous communities in Chile, such as Mapudungun by the Mapuche people.
Spanish or often some other langauge, like Quechua, or German.
Around 11% of Chileans speak English proficiently. English is not widely spoken in Chile compared to other Latin American countries. It is more commonly spoken in urban areas and among younger generations.
The future tense of "speak" is "will speak" or "shall speak."
The present infinitive of "speak" is "to speak."
To conjugate "to speak" in English, you would use the base form "speak" for present tense (I speak, you speak, he/she speaks, we speak, they speak), the past tense "spoke" (I spoke, you spoke, he/she spoke, we spoke, they spoke), and the past participle "spoken" (I have spoken, you have spoken, he/she has spoken, we have spoken, they have spoken).
The future tense is "will speak"
spanish,and english
Chile isn't a language. They speak Spanish in Chile.
Chileans do speak Spanish; it is the official language of Chile.
Chile is the country in which Chileans live.
football
Chile (it's in South America) is the country in which Chileans live.
People living in Chile are called Chileans.
Chileans speak Spanish/Castilian, so: Gracias (GRAH-see-ass)
in Chile
football
Yes
Chileans