Yes, Arabic is spoken in Somalia.
In ancient Mali, the main languages spoken were Manding, Soninke, Fulfulde, and Tamasheq. Manding was a widely used language, particularly by the ruling elite and common people in the Mali Empire. Soninke was prevalent among the Soninke people, who were influential in the region, and Fulfulde and Tamasheq were spoken by the Fulani and Tuareg communities, respectively.
Yes, Eastern Arabic, also known as Levantine Arabic, is spoken in Israel.
Arabic
Plane is spoken in Arabic as " Tayyara " in slang Arabic & it's written as "طياره" And in formal or standard Arabic it's spoken as " Taerah" & it's written as "طائره".
The people of Mali wanted to learn to read and write in Arabic because in the North of Mali there are Arabs and if the people want to communicate with most of them they can learn Arabic. Another reason is that most maliens are Muslims and one of their beliefs is that they have to go to the"Mecque" which is in Asia where they speak Arabic.
Yes, Arabic is spoken by millions of people. Arabic is spoken in many countries in the middle east and north Africa.
There are 6 Arabic dialects spoken in Yemen:Arabic, GulfArabic, HadramiArabic, Judeo-Yemeni (only about 1,000 remaining Jews speak this dialect. The rest live in Israel).Arabic, SanaaniArabic, StandardArabic, Ta'izzi-Adeni
no
Your question does not make sense. Perhaps what you mean is "Are Alsatian and Arabic spoken in France?"
The language spoken in Egypt is Arabic.
The main language spoken in Jerusalem is Hebrew. In addition, Arabic is spoken by the Arab minority there, and English is the most widely spoken foreign language. Street signs are in Hebrew and Arabic (and sometimes English as well).