english because the other countries learning how to be speak english. like the philipines.......................
Yes, many countries have keyboards with letters specific to their language. For example, countries that use the Cyrillic alphabet have keyboards with those letters. Similarly, countries with languages like Chinese or Japanese have keyboards that accommodate their characters.
No, not all languages use the same numerical system. Different languages may have different ways of representing numbers, such as different symbols or counting systems.
European languages are spoken in Africa today primarily due to colonization by European countries. The imposition of European languages during the colonial period resulted in them becoming official languages in many African countries. Additionally, ongoing economic, political, and social ties with European countries have contributed to the continued use of these languages in Africa.
as we all know it is the same on the other countries you cannot expect that they speak the same language. for example, not all the chinese only use mandarin. they also use cantonese. this is often use in hongkong and some mainland parts of china. some of them even speak shanghainese. as simple as that.
Linguistic diversity (people speaking different languages and dialects) arises from people living in different groups. For instance, people that live in the south of the United States speak a different kind of English than people that live in the north. This difference is also true of different social groups within the same society, for instance the difference between the English of old people and that of young people. The reason for this is that language changes all the time. You may have noticed sometimes that someone around you suddenly starts using a new word that you hadn't heard before, and then after a while everybody uses it. This happens all the time, and not only with words, but also with changes in pronunciation, sentence structure or the use and meaning of words. For instance, some people pronounce "new" as you with an n in front of it, while others pronounce it as moo only then with an n instead of an m, the latter one being the new version. When two groups speak the same language and get separated, the one group makes other changes to the language than the other, which can result in two entirely different languages over a long period of time. The more separated languages are, the more different they are. Foreign people live in foreign countries and are thus so far separated from us that we speak different languages.
English and French are the de facto languages of Ontario.
Generally, Jews from Western and Central Europe spoke the languages of the countries they lived in (such as German in the case of German and Austrian Jews, French in the case of French Jews), and many East European Jews spoke Yiddish.
Yes, but in different countries, Braille is in different languages. For example, in Germany, people use Braille, but if you knew how to read Braille, you would also have to know German to understand what the words say in English. People who use Braille do not have their own language; they just write and read words in a different way.
Yes, many countries have keyboards with letters specific to their language. For example, countries that use the Cyrillic alphabet have keyboards with those letters. Similarly, countries with languages like Chinese or Japanese have keyboards that accommodate their characters.
There are lots of languages used on Mount Everest. It depends what countries are there to climb the mountain.
The countries that use Baltic languages are primarily Latvia and Lithuania. There are speakers of these languages in other surrounding countries such as Poland and Estonia.
No, not all languages use the same numerical system. Different languages may have different ways of representing numbers, such as different symbols or counting systems.
There are several different countries that use horses for meat.
No! -Really, No means NO in a lot of languages.
Scrabble is made in 29 different languages.
There are an estimated 6,700 recognized languages in the world. Most of them are spoken by fewer than 1,000 people.
There are far more languages than countries in the world.Some countries use the same language, or set of languages, as other countries.e.g. UK, USA, Australia - EnglishFrance, Canada - FrenchPortugal, Brazil - Portugese.Furthermore, in the continent of Africa alone, there are literally hundreds, if not thousands, of small indigenous tribes still existing today. Each of these tribes has their own tongue. Perhaps some of these dialects bear similarities to others, but being as wide-spread as it is, we can't even measure it accurately.The country of India is home to probably a number of different languages which varies from simply "hundreds" to 1652, depending on which information you use.