Buddhism is practiced by diverse cultures across Asia and beyond, leading to a variety of languages among its followers. Major languages include Tibetan, Thai, Burmese, Chinese, Japanese, and Khmer, among others. In addition, many practitioners in Western countries may speak English and other local languages. The teachings of Buddhism have been translated into numerous languages, reflecting its global reach.
Buddhism is a religion and not a language so in this sense it is not spoken. The teachings of the Buddha are available in many languages.
The Khoikhoi people speak Khoi, one of Khoisan languages--the Khoisan languages are the click languages--spoken in Southern Africa.
Spoken languages are languages that are spoken by people for communication. They involve vocalization and sound production to convey meaning, as opposed to written languages, which use visual symbols for communication. There are thousands of spoken languages used around the world.
The Aboriginals had many languages.
There is no record of the language(s) spoken by the ancient Beothuk people.
A Buddhist is a member of a particular religion. There are Buddhists all over the world and they obviously speak the language of their respective countries and cultures. Buddhism originated in India. There are many languages spoken in India. There is no one particular language that is unique to Buddhists.
French.
There are approximately 7,117 languages spoken in the world today. The most widely spoken languages are Mandarin Chinese, Spanish, English, Hindi, and Arabic. However, there are many languages spoken by a small number of people, contributing to the linguistic diversity of the world.
Sherpa people mainly speak:SherpaNepali
Igbo people speak Igbo
The Innu speak:EnglishFrenchInnu-aimun (an algonquian language spoken by about 10,000 people)Naskapi (an algonquian language spoken by about 1200 people)
There is no information about languages that were spoken by Tocobaga people.