English is the main language, but Brisbane is a multicultural city; street signs in the Valley area of Brisbane are in English and Chinese, and on the Gold Coast in English and Japanese.
There are communities from all over the world in Brisbane, from most of Africa, Europe, Asia, and the Americas, and this is reflected in cultural associations from all parts of the world which proudly maintain excellent premises and which warmly welcome guests and members from other parts of the world, offering their foods and culture without caring what language their new friends happen to speak.
Some speak Celtic languages such as Irish, Scottish and Welsh, but most Brisbane residents whose first language isn't English are still fluent in the English language. And, in any case, people always understand one another, one way or another! It's that kind of city.
Bandjalung is an Aboriginal language from the Brisbane-Grafton area. If it is still in common use, possibly only a few thousand people would speak it.
Serbian people speak the Serbian language.
They speak the Jawoyn language.
People from Bali speak Balinese, which is a Malayo-Polynesian language.
The people in Bali speak Balinese, which is a Malayo-Polynesian language.
The people in Bali speak Balinese, which is a Malayo-Polynesian language.
The people of Bali speak Balinese, which is a Malayo-Polynesian language.
People in Taiwan speak Chinese
The people in Indonesia speak Indonesian.
they speak spanish
People in Hungary speak Hungarian.
The most commonly spoken languages in Brisbane are English, Mandarin, and Vietnamese. Brisbane is a diverse city with a significant population of residents who speak a variety of languages.