1897
Engllish is the official and accepted language.
Mexico is the only one of the three North American countries with Spanish as its official language. English is not the official language of the US, but is used as such. The two official languages of Canada are English and French.
The most official spoken language in north America is English In Canada, the two official languages are french and English there isn't a nation official language for the U.S , but Americans mostly speak Spanish and English
English is the main language spoken in South Dakota. Lakota (Native American) and German are also spoken by many people in South Dakota. There are many other languages also spoken in South Dakota.
Assuming you mean official languages, the official language of Mexico is Spanish though indigenous Indian languages are recognised. The USA does not have an official language though English is the de facto language. Canada has English and French as official languages and recognises several regional ones. There is no set language for north America.
English is the official language spoken by the most countries in North America, including the United States, Canada, and several Caribbean nations.
English is at least one of the official languages of all five of the unincorporated U.S. territories, and it is the official language of the following 28 U.S. states: Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Florida Georgia Hawaii (also Hawaiian) Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Mississippi Montana Nebraska New Hampshire North Carolina North Dakota Oklahoma South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Utah Virginia Wyoming
North Dakota's state fruit is the chokecherry or Prunus Virginiana.
North Dakota does not have an official state crop. Western Wheatgrass is designated as North Dakota's official state grass. The official fruit is the Chokecherry. The major crops produced in North Dakota are wheat, durum, flax, canola, and sunflowers.
While English is the predominate language of the United States, the country has never adopted an official language. It also does not have a secondary official language. Although English is the traditional language (in linguistic terms English is the language de facto of the United States), the U.S. currently has no "official" language. English has been given official status by 30 of the fifty states, however, but this does not apply on the Federal level, only within those individual state's jurisdictions. Also, the definition of "official language" {and the policies or laws adhered to that; such as voting rights, official state documentation, authenticated signatures etc.} varies state to state by how they define that term (or not) within their amendment(s) to their individual state constitutions. This list is of the states that have English as their official language as of 2010: California, Utah, Arizona, Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Iowa, Missouri, Arkansas, Louisiana, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Alabama, Georgia, Florida and Hawaii. (Note: The remaining 20 states do not [as of 2010] have an official language)
Although English is the traditional language (in linguistic terms English is the language de facto of the United States), the U.S. currently has no "official" language. English has been given official status by 30 of the fifty states, however, but this does not apply on the Federal level, only within those individual state's jurisdictions. Also, the definition of "official language" {and the policies or laws adhered to that; such as voting rights, official state documentation, authenticated signatures etc.} varies state to state by how they define that term (or not) within their amendment(s) to their individual state constitutions. This list is of the states that have English as their official language as of 2010: California, Utah, Arizona, Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Iowa, Missouri, Arkansas, Louisiana, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Alabama, Georgia, Florida and Hawaii. (Note: The remaining 20 states do not [as of 2010] have an official language.)
German is an official language in: Germany Switzerland Austria Belgium Liechtenstein Luxembourg Italy (province of Bolzano-Bozen). It also has official status in the following countries/regions: Krahule/Blaufuß, Slovakia (official municipal language) Namibia (national language, official language 1984-1990) Poland (auxialliary language in 22 municipalities in Opole Voivodeship) German has recognised minority language status in: Czech Republic Hungary Namibia Romania Slovakia Poland In the United States, in North Dakota and South Dakota, German is the most common language spoken at home after English.