Yes, if they study the languages. It's up to the individual person whether they learn different languages.
The main language is Italian. At the border they speak the language of the neibouring country, like french, slovene, german.
Josip Broz Tito was known to speak multiple languages including Serbo-Croatian, Slovene, German, Russian, French, and English.
Italians tend to be practical. So they tend to learn the languages that are the most useful for them to know. They therefore tend to become fluent in English, French, and German. English is important to know because of its use in world business, politics and technology. French and German are the languages of Italy's neighbors, in France and Switzerland.Additionally, some Italians know Greek, Latin, and Slovene. Greek is the language of Italy's neighbor on the east side of the Adriatic Sea, Greece. Latin is the language of the country's ancient Roman legacy and of the pre-Vatican II liturgy of the Roman Catholic Church. Slovene is the language of Italy's neighbor to the northeast, Slovenia.Italians also may know Portuguese and Spanish. It doesn't require much hard work on their part to learn these two fellow Romance languages. And in the case of the Iberian Peninsula, Italy and Spain share blood ties in regard to some of each country's leading families.
They are German so they speak German to each other.
To learn to speak it, German is harder, yes.
they speak French Not true. Switzerland has the Swiss franc, and in Switzerland they speak German, French and Italian. But, in German it is spelled "Frank", in French it is spelled "franc".
This is not French, but broken German. That would mean 'I don't speak German'. (It's not grammatical though, and should be "ich spreche kein Deutsch").
No, the official language spoken in Austria is German, not French.
More Belgians speak Dutch than French. German is also officially recognised in the east.
Fluently, she can speak English, French and German
No, Italians speak a Romance language called Italian.
Apparently, Ms Merkel does not speak French. In her interviews when visiting France she always speaks through a German interpret.