There are three languages that the Spanish people speak: Castilian, Catalan, and Galician.
Castilian is the most used language in Spain. It is also the official language of all Spanish-speaking countries.
Catalan is one of the official languages in Spain and it is spoken by about 10% of the population.
Galican is a minority language in Spain but it can be heard in some regions such as Galicia, Asturias, and Cantabria. For more information visit langmainternational(dot)com
The official language of Argentina is Spanish.
Mandarin Chinese is the most spoken language in the world by number of native speakers, followed by Spanish and English.
After the Spanish conquest, the Inca language Quechua continued to be spoken by a significant portion of the population. However, Spanish became the dominant language in the region and had a lasting impact on the culture and language of the Inca people. Today, Quechua is still spoken by several million people in the Andean region, alongside Spanish.
No, we don't speak Spanish. Brazil official language is Portuguese. All people talk Portuguese except for indigenous people. Spanish for us is a foreign language that we have to learn like people in the U.S do but in the U.S there are a lot that people whose first language is Spanish, here is not like that. On the other hand most people that speak Portuguese can understand Spanish easily and vice versa. So usually we don't learn Spanish as our second language. We study English instead.
Approximately 90 million people around the world speak Spanish as a second language.
no there are not so many people in iceland that can talk spanish
I don't know about the babies, but you definitely write your own language. Your question should read: "Do babies talk their own language?"
The official language of Argentina is Spanish.
Mandarin Chinese is the most spoken language in the world by number of native speakers, followed by Spanish and English.
After the Spanish conquest, the Inca language Quechua continued to be spoken by a significant portion of the population. However, Spanish became the dominant language in the region and had a lasting impact on the culture and language of the Inca people. Today, Quechua is still spoken by several million people in the Andean region, alongside Spanish.
No me hables en español
spanish
No, we don't speak Spanish. Brazil official language is Portuguese. All people talk Portuguese except for indigenous people. Spanish for us is a foreign language that we have to learn like people in the U.S do but in the U.S there are a lot that people whose first language is Spanish, here is not like that. On the other hand most people that speak Portuguese can understand Spanish easily and vice versa. So usually we don't learn Spanish as our second language. We study English instead.
The people from Spain (Spanish) spoke Spanish.
People from Spain are called "Spanish." Spanish is also a language name.
Not at all, that's our mother language. It's a little upseting, though, when people speak Spanish thinking that's our mother language. Most Brazilians will think it's pretty awesome you're speaking portuguese, quite funny, and will probably help you learn if you are up to.
Spanish is the predominant language spoken throughout Argentina. Other languages spoken by Argentinians include English, Portuguese, Italian, German, and French.