No. Most Mexicans speak Spanish as mother's tongue and 5.7% of Mexican population speak one of 63 Amerindian languages. Mexican official documents recognize any of these as official languages.
Other foreign languages such as French and English are spoken by a small percentage (5-10%) of the population, mostly for business and tourism-related activities.
The percentage(say:purr-sen-tayj)of mexico(say:meh-sick-oh)is called"Spanish"that is bilingual(say:bill-and-juole)
Louisiana, New Mexico, and Hawaii
No. Many people speak English due to tourism and business-related activities, but it is nowhere near being a bilingual city.
Stephen F. Austin went to Texas when Mexico was apart of Texas
New Mexico
No. While laws in New Mexico are published in both English and Spanish, the state has no official language or languages.
You will have a better chance of getting a job in that school district if you are bilingual. It is not a requirement, but will certainly help you.
New Mexico entered the union in 1916 as an officially bilingual state, with both English and Spanish recognized as official languages. This recognition of bilingualism was a reflection of the state's vibrant Hispanic and Native American cultures.
Peppi the Shrimp was bilingual. Most people haven't heared of him, but he's one of Rizzo's friends in Muppets from Space
The noun form of the adjective bilingual is bilingualism.
Bilingual means you can speak two languages so you become bilingual by learning another language.
Not that I'm aware of, bilingual says it best.