An answer giving the data that you have requested is not readily available. But the following information may suffice. It is estimated that 95% of Germany's population speak German.
Of Germany's 82,210,894 inhabitants,
74,969,842 are German= (91.2%) all of whom speak German,
the remaining 7.241,052 are foreigners. 1,713,551 are Turkish all of whom speak Turkish and mostly speak German
528,318 are Italian all of whom speak Italian and mostly speak German
384,808 are Polish all of whom speak Polish and mostly speak German
50, 000 are Danish all of whom speak Danish and German The remaining 4114375 are minorities from the many other countries of the world,
for which there are no statistics available. Note:-
All statistics (2007) are estimates.
no. yes, after a long search I found an english subtitle that works here (a turkish site): http://subtitles.yedincigemi.com/s/98118/42576-Tear-This-Heart-Out.html. Italian, portuguese & romanian versions are also available, but i wanted english.
The main language of Turkey is of course Turkish. Other popular languages include Kurdish, Arabic, Laz, and Zaza. English is a popular foreign language spoken in Turkey, but other languages include Bulgarian, Armenian, Serbian, Albanian, and Greek.
I'm a teenager and i like Chinese best, then Turkish then Italian then Indian. but boys mostly prefer Indian
The real founder of Turkish rule in India is Mohammed of Ghori.
No he is Turkish
17%
Turkish. But %70 Turks can speak English, Italian, Deutch, Arabic.
: Germany, with a total population of 82.4 million is made up of 91.5% German, 2.4% Turkish, and the other 6.1% is Greek, Italian, Polish, Russian, Serbo-Croatian and Others.
The word verme is Turkish and translates into English as the word not. This word translates into Italian as non.
jamacian japenease swaheli latin greek Italian Turkish American Irish scottish welsh BUT NOT ENGLISH !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Petto is an Italian equivalent of the Turkish word göğüs.Specifically, the Italian and the Turkish words can be translated as "chest" in the anatomical sense. The Italian word is a masculine noun which may be preceded by the masculine singular definite article il("the") or the masculine singular definite article un, uno ("a, one"). The pronunciation will be "PEHT-toh" in Italian and "guh-yooss" in Turkish.
No, the Turkish Lira and the old Italian Lira are different currencies. The Turkish Lira is the current currency of Turkey, while the Italian Lira was the previous currency of Italy before it switched to the Euro in 2002.
A tourist can manage with only English relatively decently in Turkey. Roughly 30% of Turkish people can speak English, and a greater percentage know a few words. The percentage rises proportionally in major cities and famous tourist destinations. However, for long-term living in Turkey or going into the rural areas, English quickly becomes useless. A person would need Turkish in this context.
In Gelsenkirchen, West Germany but they say that he's Turkish because one of his parents was born in Germany and the other is Turkish.
You can only watch it in Turkish and Arabic. It has not been dubbed into English.
turkish and english
Greek, Turkish,Italian.