Northern and Eastern Tyrol are a part of Austria. In Austria German is the official language - with many regional and local dialects. Also in Tyrol there are several dialects.
Southern Tyrol is since the end of the 1st World War (1918) part of Italy. Therefore German and Italian are the main languages; there is also a 3rd language "Ladinisch" that is spoken only by a minority.
Other than English, there were several languages that were spoken in Massachusetts. Spanish was spoken the most, then Portuguese and Chinese.
Only French is spoken in paris.French
Arabic
Afrikaans
russian and other neighboring languages
The most widely spoken language in South Tyrol, Italy, is German.Here are a list of languages with their approximate percentages (as of 2011):German 61%Italian 23%Ladin 4%All others combined 11%
Spoken languages are languages that are spoken by people for communication. They involve vocalization and sound production to convey meaning, as opposed to written languages, which use visual symbols for communication. There are thousands of spoken languages used around the world.
Many languages are not spoken in India, including:HebrewFilipinoHawaiianTlingitNavahoXhosaZulu
No. More than 200 languages are spoken.
There are roughly 6,500 languages spoken today!
Mandarin and Uyghur are the two languages spoken in Xinjiang to about 50/50.
The primary languages spoken in Region 5 are English and Filipino. Additionally, some indigenous languages are also spoken, such as Bicolano and Waray.
The main languages spoken in KwaZulu-Natal (KZN) are Zulu, English, and Afrikaans. Other languages spoken in the region include Xhosa and Sotho.
English and Russian are the two main languages of the ISS, but many languages are spoken there.
Indie is a diverse country with over 1,652 languages spoken. The main languages spoken in India are Hindi, Bengali, Telugu, Marathi, Tamil, Urdu, Gujarati, Kannada, Odia, and Punjabi.
The most commonly spoken languages in Bilbao are Spanish and Basque.
The languages spoken in Wallonia are French and German.