Arctic natives speak a variety of languages, depending on their specific culture and region. Some examples include Inuktitut, Inupiatun, Siberian Yupik, and Kalaallisut.
People in Hawaii speaks the Hawaiian language along with the English language. Hawaiian language is considered to be a Polynesian language that most natives of Hawaii speak.
Yes, English is commonly spoken in the Arctic region, especially in areas where there is interaction with tourists or where English is taught as a second language. However, people in remote Arctic communities may speak indigenous languages or other local languages.
No, Inuit is not a language. Inuit are Indigenous peoples living in the Arctic regions of Canada, Greenland, and the United States. They speak Inuktitut, which is one of the Inuit languages.
In Nunavut, the people primarily speak Inuktitut, which is one of the official languages of the territory alongside English and French. Inuktitut is a language spoken by the Inuit people of the Canadian Arctic and is an important part of their cultural heritage.
The natives speak Mallorquin, a dialect of Catalan. The official languages are Catalan and Spanish, most people can speak both. Because of the high tourism in the area many people speak English, German and French.
English, what else?
That will vary with their language and as you did not specify where they are natives of, i can't begin to guess which of the many thousands of languages they might speak.
He forces the island's natives to learn to speak his language.
Eskimos
People in Hawaii speaks the Hawaiian language along with the English language. Hawaiian language is considered to be a Polynesian language that most natives of Hawaii speak.
yes and now
Natives speak in their own tongue, whether it is English or dialect
they are sami people
Yes. They forced their culture and traditions upon them, including their language. That is the reason nowadays Mexico's people speak mostly in Spanish.
Because penguins do not live in the arctic, they live in the antarctic. There are no natives to eat the penguin egg.
He forces the island's native to teach him their language so he communicate with them and become their leader.
Yes, English is commonly spoken in the Arctic region, especially in areas where there is interaction with tourists or where English is taught as a second language. However, people in remote Arctic communities may speak indigenous languages or other local languages.