Nahuatl, Mayan, spanish
Approximately 98% of Mexicans speak Spanish as their native language.
The Mexicans who settled in Texas who speak Spanish are called Mexicans. Those who speak English are called Americans.
92.7% speak Spanish and 5.7% speak Spanish AND some indigenous language (such as Nahuatl or Mayan
Yes.
Mainly Spanish, but some people also speak Nahuatl.
Yes, Mexicans use commas in writing to separate items in a list, to mark off introductory words or phrases, and to separate clauses in a sentence. The use of commas in Mexican Spanish follows the same principles as in other varieties of Spanish.
100%
They speak Spanish.
The indigenous peoples who speak Nahuatl and who are descendants of the ancient Aztecs still practice the poinsettia tradition nowadays in Mexico.Specifically, the poinsettia tradition refers to the view of the plant as a symbol of spiritual purity. Because of the symbolism, the traditional view favors the plant's incorporation into religious rituals. So the plant's symbolic role in end-of-the-year celebratory events are continued by modern Mexicans who speak Nahuatl and seek to perpetuate the customs and traditions that they inherit from their Aztec ancestors.
50 and they are all Mexicans 50 and they are all Mexicans
NO. While it is true that the vast majority of Mexicans speak Spanish as their first language, a number of Mexicans do not speak Spanish as their first language.There are a number of rural areas where people learn Spanish in school and their families speak a native language like Nahuatl (the old Aztec language) or Maya or Mixtec. Some indigenous Mexicans have no command of Spanish at all, since they never leave their communities and were never properly educated. There are also a number of immigrants to Mexico who raise their children with a foreign first language, but these children of immigrants usually learn Spanish from a very young age.