Old English. Many words come to us from a mixture of French and a Germanic/ Viking language. The word “beef†is one example of a French words we use. The nobility didn’t speak English, but French. Even today the Queen’s menu is in French.
Early Modern English was the main language of England in the 1500s, but it was pronounced quite different than the English of today.
In the 1600s, people in England spoke Modern English.
That depends on where they lived.
You tell me!
English. Think Shakespearean English.
People who celebrate Halloween in England mostly speak English.
Most people spoke English in England in 1749.
No. In Monaco they speak French, Italian or Monegasque. In England they speak English.
Yes, English people speak English. English is the official language of England and is spoken by the majority of the population.
In France they speak French and in England we speak English.
Well for the indigenous people of England, English is their native language.
Britain is an island, not a language. Most of the people in Britain speak English.
People speak Cornish in Cornwall, a county in southwest England. Cornish is a Celtic language and is recognized as a minority language in the United Kingdom.
People in Spain speak Spanish for the same reason that people in England speak English--that's where the language evolved, and there was never any reason (conquest, fashion, or otherwise) for the Spanish people to switch to using another language.
Some parts of England, particularly in the past, spoke French due to the Norman Conquest in 1066. French became the language of the aristocracy and nobility, leading to its influence in certain regions. Today, remnants of French influence can still be seen in place names, legal terminologies, and other aspects of English language and culture.
People who are born in a country where English is spoken, like England and the United States, knows how to speak English. Also, People who have English as a second language know how to speak English.
They speak the Jawoyn language.