That depends on whether you're applying for a job that requires you to speak both languages. If you're working in an English-speaking environment or one where Spanish isn't used at all, then it wouldn't be a very useful skill to have.
More people speak Spanish as a native tongue (first language) than English, but more people speak English as a second or third or fourth language than Spanish.
English and Spanish have both tied for the amount of native and global speakers. Sometimes it's Spanish over English, sometimes it's English over Spanish, both at one point happened. It usually goes, Mandarin Chinese as a first, Spanish/English as close seconds, and then in third it's either Hindi-Urdu or French.
I don't speak Spanish but I'm almost certain it's not. English is spoken more than Spanish.
Yes.Alternative answer; no, they either speak Amercian or Canadian
Cuba and Mexico both speak dialects of Spanish.For more information about the languages of Mexico, click here.For more information about the languages of Cuba, click here.
What? You don't know me any more?
Except for Belize, All Central American republics have more people who speak spanish as a first language rather than English or creole:HondurasGuatemalaEl SalvadorCosta RicaNicaraguaPanama
Approximately 1.5 billion people worldwide speak a language other than Spanish and English as their primary language. This includes languages such as Mandarin, Hindi, Arabic, and French, among others. Language diversity is vast and varied globally.
more people speak spanish
I am bilingual and can speak English and Spanish fluently.
I can communicate in multiple languages, including English, Spanish, French, German, Italian, and many more.
English is not an official language in Uruguay (Spanish is) so not many people speaks English. However, there are many bilingual schools (who teach in Spanish and English) and many people studies English but it's not common to speak in English in local shops. Hotels and tourist places yes.