The same language I speak in any location.
He speaks Danish
The area west of Devonshire, England is Cornwall. The language is related to Breton and Welsh and therefore a Celtic language. It is a revived language.
Chinook people speak the Chinook Language. Chinuk Wawa is a daily spoken language. Chinook Jargon is a trade language that was used up and down the West Coast of North America
West African consists of over a dozen countries, and the official languages spoken vary from one country to the next. In Benin and Senegal, for instance, they speak French. In Cape Verde, they speak Portuguese. In Ghana, they speak English. In Mauritania, they speak Arabic. And even beyond the official languages, most West African countries have regional languages, like Ewe or Creole.
Approximately 20 million people speak Hausa as a first language, primarily in Nigeria and Niger. It is also spoken as a second language by millions more in surrounding countries in West Africa.
The official language of Ireland is English. However, many people are able to speak Irish Gaelic, particularly in the west and southwest of the country.
There is no specific answer to that. People in all counties can speak Irish. There are some parts of Ireland, particularly along the west coast, where Irish is the main language. Those would only be small areas of those counties, and most of those counties would still have English as the main language. An area where Irish is spoken as the main language is known as a Gaeltacht. Counties like Cork, Kerry, Galway and Donegal in particular is where you would find them. Some other counties would have them, like Waterford.
The Hebrides is not a language but rather a group of islands off the west coast of Scotland. The people who live in the Hebrides typically speak Scottish Gaelic or English.
No Gambia don't speak french actually but this language is more and more common because french is the most important language in West Africa;
Yoruba is a tribe, but it is also a language. Not all people from the Yoruba tribe speak Yoruba as a language, and not all people that speak Yoruba are from the Yoruba tribe. For example, some from Akwa-ibom, Bendel, Delta, or Rivers tribe speak Yoruba. But most from the Yoruba tribe speak Yoruba, or Pidgin English.
Probably because of the colonial powers that ruled them between 1881 and 1914, for example, some countries were ruled by the British, so would speak English (but not necessarily as their first language of course), Some were ruled by the Portuguese, so would speak Portuguese etc. etc...However, there were still some countries that maintained their own power, like Ethiopia for example, so would keep the language they had before the Scramble for Africa, as nobody ever controlled them.
AnswerYoruba is the name of the ethnic group of people in West Africa. It is also the name of the language they speak.