Which two European countries have populations between 59 and 60 million?
The population of countries in Europe can be found in many census publications. The population varies each year. Germany has about 81 million people as of 2014 while England has about 55 million people.
In 1750, China and India had the largest populations in the world. China's population was estimated to be around 225 million, while India's population was around 200 million.
There are 14 countries in the world with populations of more than 80 million people. Those countries include: # China (1.3 billion) # India (1.1 billion) # United States (305 million) # Indonesia (231 million) # Brazil (187 million) # Pakistan (164 million) # Bangladesh (159 million) # Nigeria (148 million) # Russia (142 million) # Japan (128 million) # Mexico (107 million) # Philippines (89 million) # Vietnam (87 million) # Germany (82 million) Ethiopia is quickly approaching the 80 million mark with 79 million, as is Egypt with 75 million.
At present the countries having the biggest populations are: 1) China with 1.3 billion people 2) India with 1.1 billion people 3) USA with 306 million people At present the countries having the biggest populations are: 1) China with 1.3 billion people 2) India with 1.1 billion people 3) USA with 306 million people
No accurate and official statistics available till now. But by assuming that after 1989 many Bulgarians immigrated to US and Canada and from the historical fact that many of the offsprings of once greater Bulbaria now live in many countries like Greece, Serbia, Hungary, Moldavia, Macedonia. And new economic immigrants (guest workers mainly) to European Union countries like Spain, Italy, UK, Greece, Czech Republic and elsewhere The answer is between 1 million to 1.5 million overseas Bulgarian speak Bulgarian. NB! A limited number of foreign nationals either studied, worked or lived in Bulgaria also speak Bulgarian language!
There are 35 countries with populations over 39 million. A few of the countries are South Korea, Colombia, Ukraine, and Spain. Sudan is the 35th.
London, Paris and Kiev
Brazil, approx - 192 million, Colombia - 45 million, Argentina - 40 million.
The population of countries in Europe can be found in many census publications. The population varies each year. Germany has about 81 million people as of 2014 while England has about 55 million people.
The European Union is not a country. It is an orgainisation that has 28 individual countries as members. So it would not be listed on a population list as a single group. Each individual country would. Some have very large populations, like Germany with over 80 million. Others have smaller populations, like Malta with only about 420,000 people.
About six million.
Chad or Guinea or Rwanda or Senegal or Somalia are the countries with populations around 9 million.
In 1750, China and India had the largest populations in the world. China's population was estimated to be around 225 million, while India's population was around 200 million.
Two countries with large Kurdish populations are Turkey and Iran. Turkey has the largest Kurdish population, estimated to be around 15-20 million. Iran also has a significant Kurdish population, estimated to be around 6-8 million.
The total population of the 28 countries of the European Union in 2015, is about 508 million and rising.
The most widely spoken in Europe is English. The most spoken languages in Europe, with the numbers of speakers, are: German 84 million (Germany + Austria + part of Switzerland) French 70 million (France + part of Belgium + part of Switzerland) English 67 million (UK + Ireland) Italian 61 million (Italy) Spanish 46 million (Spain) The figures are calculated by adding the populations of the relevant countries. They are approximate only. Russian should be somewhere in this list has about 150 million speakers, but I can find no figures which say how many of these are in Europe. Source: Wikipedia article "List of European countries by population".
Several countries have populations of less than 6 million people. For example, countries like Finland, Norway, and New Zealand each have populations below this threshold. Additionally, smaller nations such as Luxembourg, Malta, and Iceland also fit this criterion. These countries often have unique cultures and economies despite their smaller population sizes.