English is the most widely spoken.
Germanic languages (Danish, Faroese, Icelandic, Norwegian, and Swedish) are the most common language group in Northern Europe, one of only two. The other is Uralic (Finnish and Sami).
The most common language group in Northern Europe is the Germanic language group, which includes languages such as Danish, Swedish, Norwegian, Icelandic, and Faroese. These languages are spoken by millions of people in countries like Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Iceland, and parts of Finland.
The most spoken language in Europe is Russian with an estimated 150,000,000 native speakers. English, French, and Russian are common second languages. However, the continent of Europe has about 40 major language groups, each having official status in one or more countries. Europe also has thousands of regional languages.
Chechen has the most speakers, but no one language in the Caucasus can be considered common in the area.
There is no one language that all Europeans speak. There are around 50 countries in Europe, with many national languages and people from other parts of the world living in Europe while speaking their own native language from their home countries. Some of the main languages in Europe include French, Spanish, English, German, Italian, Dutch, Polish, Russian, Greek and many, many more.
the most common figurative language (s) are English and Chinese.
Actually most people in Europe, not just Switzerland, speak more than one language, in fact most countries in the world are that way. America is the weird one in that most Americans speak only one language.
No. Slavic languages are spoken in Eastern and Southern Europe. Russia is considered the mother of Slavic languages, and could be considered as part of Northern Europe, in which case this would make Slavic languages the most common in Northern Europe. However, Russia is included in Eastern Europe, and therefore, Slavic languages are not even present in Northern Europe (natively). If speaking by splitting Europe into just northern and southern regions, then Russia would be in Northern Europe, and Slavic languages would be the predominate language family in the area. Northern European countries' languages typically are not present outside their own borders. For example, Danish is only common in Denmark, Norwegian in Norway, Swedish in Sweden (and is official in Finland, although spoken by a minority), Finnish in Finland, and Icelandic in Iceland. And if Northern Europeans do learn a second language, it typically isn't one of their neighboring countries. The most common second languages in Northern Europe are English and German. Russian influence does not flow into the Nordic countries, except possibly in Finland, where Russians most recently held control.
Europe is a continent. Continents do not have official languages.Spanish is the official language of one country in Europe - Spain.
It is the most common programming language, but of course there are many others. It is one of the easiest computer programming.
One of the most beautiful countries in the world, rich history, and the oldest language still active in Europe.
The countries in Europe with French as an official language are France, Belgium, Luxembourg, and Switzerland. Of these, France is the only one with French as the only official language.