While Spanish is the official language of the Galapagos Islands, some residents and tourism workers may speak English, especially in tourist areas. It can be helpful to know basic Spanish phrases to communicate with locals.
Most people in the Galapagos Islands speak Spanish as their primary language. However, due to the influx of tourism, English is also commonly spoken, especially in areas frequented by tourists.
Danes, Greenlanders and Faroese people (People from the Faeroe Islands). Only Danes speak it as their primary language. Norwegians speak a Norwegianised version of Danish when they speak 'Bokmål' which is the most commonly spoken version of the Norwegian language.
Approximately 6 million people speak Danish as their first language. It is primarily spoken in Denmark, but also in some parts of Germany, Greenland, and the Faroe Islands.
As of 2012, Catalan is spoken by 17% of the population, which is about 8 million people.
The Galapagos islands are a province of Ecudaor, with a population of about 40,000. They speak predominantly Spanish
The approximate population of the Galapagos Islands is around 30,000 people.
While Spanish is the official language of the Galapagos Islands, some residents and tourism workers may speak English, especially in tourist areas. It can be helpful to know basic Spanish phrases to communicate with locals.
Most people in the Galapagos Islands speak Spanish as their primary language. However, due to the influx of tourism, English is also commonly spoken, especially in areas frequented by tourists.
It is a southern/western type music. Most people there speak in Spanish so their singing is mostly in Spanish for those people. People play the guitar and banjos and lots of string instruments.
A chamorro is any member of the native people living on the Mariana Islands. It can also refer to the language that they speak. Note that the Mariana Islands are between Asia and Australia and include the island of Guam (an American territory).
The people living in Romania speak in 1900 the Romanian language, as today and also probable in the future.
All people living in the United States should speak English fluently.
yes old English
Yes, they do. The majority speaks English but some in the northern highlands and islands speak Scots Gaelic too.
Lots of people in the Caribbean speak English and it is an official language in many islands there, but not everyone speaks English in the Caribbean.
Hawaii, being a group of islands, does not speak any languages.The people in Hawaii speak a lot of different languages, depending on their heritage and education.