The 16 German states in English are:
Baden Württemberg
Bavaria
Berlin
Brandenburg
Bremen
Hamburg
Hesse
Lower Saxony
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern
North Rhein-Westphalia
Rheinland-Palatinate
Saarland
Saxony
Saxony-Anhalt
Schleswig Holstein
Thuringia
There aren't any U.S. states with German names. All U.S. states have names from: English Spanish Native American Languages Hawaiian (Hawaii) Inuit (Alaska)
Germanic languages (English, German, Dutch, etc) are mainly spoken in Europe but are found all over the world, particularly (in no particular order):Ireland (English)The United Kingdom (English)Germany (German)Belgium (German)Netherlands (Dutch)Luxembourg (German)Switzerland (German)Austria (German)Sweden (Swedish)Denmark (Danish)Norway (Norwegian)Iceland (Icelandic)The United States (English)Canada (English)Australia (English)New Zealand (English)South Africa (English, Afrikaans)Jamaica (English)Nigeria (English)Suriname (Dutch)The Bahamas (English)Belarus (Yiddish)Israel (Yiddish, English)Argentina (Yiddish, German)
Most of the immigrants coming to the United States in the mid 1800s were English, Irish, and _______.IMPROVED ANSWER:The answer is German.
Roderich Cescotti has written: 'Luftfahrt-Definitionen' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Aeronautics, German, English, German language, English language 'Aviation dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Aeronautics, German, English, German language, English language 'Luftfahrt-definitionen, Englisch-Deutsch/Deutsch-Englisch = Glossary of aeronautical definitions, English-German/German-English' 'Aerospace Dictionary, German to English and English to German' 'Glossary of aeronautical definitions; English-German, German-English' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Aeronautics, German, English, German language, English language
The Untied States has noofficial language. It is de facto English, but German was only one vote behind English when the choice was made for the language of the Declaration of Independence.
Deutsch is and English translation for German. And it is using English and German
English is "Englisch". And German is "Deutsch".
It's actually a myth that the United States once was close to voting German as its official language; the United States does not now, nor has it ever, had an official language. English is used as the de facto official language, but there is in fact no legally official language in the United States. Several states have official languages. Louisiana has English and French; New Mexico has English and Spanish; Hawai'i has English and Hawai'ian; etc. If, theoretically, German or any other language were voted as the official language, in all likelihood there would be little change to how things are done already because English is so widely spoken.
Richard Solomon Appel has written: 'A collection of English and German hymns' -- subject(s): Reformed Church in the United States, Texts, Hymns, English Hymns, German Hymns
German Gift = English Poison English Gift = German Geschenk
German, French, British, Spanish, and English .
English Easter = German Ostern