Dutch, mainly, but also Frysk and the dialects Gronings and Drents
No, Dutch and Danish are not the same. Dutch is spoken in the Netherlands, Belgium, and Suriname, while Danish is spoken in Denmark. They belong to different language families - Dutch is a Germanic language, while Danish is a North Germanic language.
The Netherlands is in the Northern hemisphere.
It is Dutch, the language spoken in The Netherlands. A dialect of Dutch is also used in the northern (Flemish) part of Belgium.
The Netherlands is in the northern hemisphere.
Flemish is primarily spoken in the northern region of Belgium, known as Flanders. It is one of the official languages of Belgium, alongside French and German. Flemish is a dialect of Dutch and is the most widely spoken language in Belgium.
Yes it is. Dutch is one name for the language spoken in the country called the Netherlands which contains the western provinces which make up Holland. The Dutch themselves refer to their country as "Nederland" and their language "Nederlands". A mutually comprehensible variant "Flemish" is also spoken in northern Belgium.
In The Netherlands, Belgium, Surinam, Netherlands Antilles, and on Aruba.
yes
Two languages spoken in the northern hemisphere are English and Mandarin. English is widely spoken in countries like the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom, while Mandarin is primarily spoken in countries like China and Taiwan.
Dutch.
Possibly, but it originates from northern Spain.
Chinese immigrants would speak Chinese but the primary language in The Netherlands is Dutch.