Chinese, English, And some others like Japanese Languages that a lot of people speak
Languages with large numbers of speakers, official status, and strong cultural importance are likely to survive in the future. Examples include English, Spanish, Mandarin, Hindi, and Arabic. Indigenous languages with active revitalization efforts may also have a better chance of survival.
The future perfect tense of survive is will have survived.
Will survive going to survive They will survive the night ok. I am going to survive the storm.
This is probably the word bilingual.
Yes, there are many languages that are no longer spoken due to various reasons such as globalization, colonization, and cultural assimilation. These languages are referred to as extinct languages. It is estimated that around half of the world's languages are in danger of becoming extinct in the near future.
There are around 150 distinct languages in the Philippines. There could be local dialects of these languages probably nobody has recorded how many.
The future perfect tense of survive is will have survived.
Don't worry about the future. Focus on present languages because no one knows how long anything will be around for in the future.
Will survive going to survive They will survive the night ok. I am going to survive the storm.
food, oxygen, and water to survive.
DOUGO ROCKS
In the future, an ocelot will need food, water, and shelter to survive. These are provided by nature but can taken away or destroyed by man.
Of the estimated nine languages spoken by the Australian Tasmanian Aborigines, none survive. As a whole, the Tasmanian aboriginal languages were called the Palawa.
To survive
languages are probably around 4 billion years old
Probably.
the toys of the future probably will be hover boards.
To the future, Scrooge's future, but the ghost of Christmas future really doesn't talk, just pointed, but Scrooge new his future was screwed. At the end he did survive.