Saskatchewan is a province in the country of Canada. Canada is by law a bilingual country (English and French), and while the truth is that most people are better at speaking one of the official languages than the other, the ideal is to speak both. The majority of people in Saskatchewan speak English, but there are also some who speak French or even one of the native languages, like Metis or Inuit.
People who speak several different languages are called polyglots.
For the languages of Iraq, click here.For the languages of the Bantu people, click here.
Most people speak one or two languages fluently. Some people may speak three or more languages, but that is not the norm for the average person.
English
The Inuit are not Indians and the Inuit have many different languages. It's like asking someone what did Europeans speak?
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inuit, they speak inuit
Saskatchewan is a province in the country of Canada. Canada is by law a bilingual country (English and French), and while the truth is that most people are better at speaking one of the official languages than the other, the ideal is to speak both. The majority of people in Saskatchewan speak English, but there are also some who speak French or even one of the native languages, like Metis or Inuit.
The Inuit people speak Inuktitut language
For the languages of Iraq, click here.For the languages of the Bantu people, click here.
People who speak several different languages are called polyglots.
The Bantu people don't speak religion. Furthermore, Bantu is a group of languages, not an ethnic group. People who speak Bantu languages practice many different religions.
Slavic people speak Slavic languages. Some of the most common are:RussianPolishCzechSlovakBulgarianUkrainianBelarussianRusynSlovenianBosnianCroatianMontenegrinMacedonianChurch SlavonicFurthermore, some Slavic people speak non-Slavic languages as well, particularly:EnglishGermanRomanianHungarianFrench
jamaican people speak two languages
Eskimo
English