They speak a few different languages, depending on which community and in which country they are in.
Click on the link below for more information.
They speak Inuktitut.
(see related link)
"Eskimo" is no longer a 'politically correct' term. Here in Canada they are called Inuit or The People, in other places they are the Aleut, the Yupik or Inupiat. From Greenland to Siberia these people have two major language groups with at least 8-9 languages. Some of these languages are Iniuktitut, Yupik, Inupik, Tunumilt and Inupiaq. Some other minor languages are spoken by less than 800 people.
"Eskimo" refers to all the indigenous tribes who have traditionally inhabited the northern circumpolar region stretching from eastern Siberia (Russia), across Alaska (of the United States) and Canada, to Greenland. These tribes are not all the same ethnicity, and the term "Eskimo" is outdated.
The languages typically spoken in this region are:
There are no Antarctic Eskimos -- thus, no language.
There is no such thing as "Antarctic Eskimos." Antarctica has never had a permanent human population.
They speak siberia
They have many different languages.
They speak arabian.. o_o
Yorklish, a variation of English.
Data Definition Lenguage (DDL) Data Manipulation Lenguage (DML) Data Dictionary
It is not countries that speak Yup'ik, but rather the Yup'ik Eskimos who have grown up in villages or have had the language passed down to them.
Old Norse
Japanese
Latín/christianity
Hebrew
Is Apache a lenguage?
eskimos
Eskimos
No, we are eskimos.