The national language of England in 1564 was Early Modern English.
In 16th Century England, English was the main language.
Mostly English spoken.
A:The language spoken by Palestinian Jews in the first century was Aramaic, so the apostle John would have spoken Aramaic.
The royal court typically spoke the language of the ruling class or the official language of the country. For example, in medieval England, they would have spoken Middle English, while in France, they would have spoken French.
If one considers English to be a native language of the U.S. (which could be a point of debate in itself), then Spanish would be the most-spoken foreign language and the dialects of the Chinese language would be the second most-spoken foreign language.
You would be most likely to hear a Celtic language spoken in Ireland, where Irish Gaelic is an official language alongside English.
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English is spoken in England, so they would just say "No".
If you mean an Alternate Language, it would be a language that is not the one being spoken of.
The main language spoken in Luxembourg is Luxembourgish. French and German are also widely spoken and used in official settings.
French seeped into the English language during the Norman Invasion/Norman Conquest of England in 1066. According to Wikipedia, "One of the most obvious changes [from the Norman Conquest] was the introduction of Anglo-Norman, a northern dialect of Old French, as the language of the ruling classes in England, displacing Old English. This predominance was further reinforced and complicated in the mid-twelfth century by an influx of followers of the Angevin dynasty, speaking a more mainstream dialect of French. Not until the fourteenth century would English regain its former primacy, while the use of French at court continued into the fifteenth century." French was spoken mainly by the ruling classes/royalty and clergy, but not as much by the common people of England. I am not sure if it was ever the actual "official language" of England, but I doubt it because it was mainly the court that spoke French.
Over 100 languages are spoken in England, reflecting its diverse population. English is the most commonly spoken language, but there are also significant communities speaking languages like Polish, Urdu, Punjabi, Bengali, and Arabic.
You punctuate it properly and say you're welcome.
Your "mother tongue" is your first language, the language your mother would have spoken to you as a child and that would be your natural instinctive language.