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No. Most Africans from former British colonies do speak English. However, those from the nations of former French West Africa speak French, or a dialect thereof. And many Africans still only speak their indigenous African language.
The Sioux nation had many different languages, but yes, there are still people who can speak them
The Songhai people primarily spoke the Songhai language, which is a Niger-Congo language belonging to the Nilo-Saharan language family. It is still spoken by some communities in present-day Niger, Mali, Burkina Faso, and Benin.
The two main languages spoken are Spanish and Portuguese and we continue to speak them because over the years they have become our native languages.
Belize i think
Puerto Rican spoke, and still speak, Spanish.
Mexican is not a language, but a nationality. Spanish is a language spoken in Spain and many countries in Latin America, including Mexico. The main difference between Mexican Spanish and European Spanish lies in accent, vocabulary, and some regional variations in grammar and pronunciation.
There have been chimney sweeps in many different countries, and they have spoken (and still speak) many languages.
Usually English but i do know tons of people can live in the US and speak spanish or french and there are still people who speak all languages it depends
Officially there are about 7 million South Africans who speak Afrikaans as a first language, with up to 15 million being proficient in Afrikaans. Afrikaans is more prevalent than English as a first language, but is English has a higher incidence as a Second language and is the primary language of tuition.
There are a few indigenous language speakers in most of the countries in the Americas.
Nobody can simply "invent" a language. Languages simply evolve over a long period of time. Hindi is still evolving as we speak. Languages are living.