English is not used commonly between Israelis (who use Hebrew and Arabic to speak to each other), but the vast majority of Israelis can speak English well enough to talk to travelers. In terms of a general idea. Fewer Israelis speak English than Dutchmen, but more than Germans.
No. "Hebrew" is a language, not a person. The people living in Jerusalem today Speak Hebrew and Arabic.
Hebrew is the national language of Israel, and one of two official languages (along with Arabic). More than 6 million Israelis speak Hebrew.About 200,000 people speak Yiddish in Israel, mainly among the Haredi communities. Only about 1 million people speak Yiddish in the entire world.
Hebrew is the most commonly spoken language in Israel.
Israel. (People in Turkey do not speak Hebrew. The Jewish population of Turkey is less than 1%).
Tel Aviv is a city in Israel, where Hebrew and Arabic are the official languages.
Virtually all businesses in Israel speak Hebrew.
No European country speaks Hebrew as either an official language or national language. Hebrew is spoken in Israel, which is in Asia.However, there are many Jews all over Europe who speak Hebrew.
No, Israel and Palestine do not speak the same language. Israelis primarily speak Hebrew, while Palestinians primarily speak Arabic.
There is no language of Buddhism. Individual Buddhists speak whatever language they and their countrymen speak. Many original Buddhist texts are written in Pali in the parallel way that many original Christian texts are in Hebrew, Aramaic or Greek and the vast body of Christians do not speak these languages
-- The 2008 population of Israel ... where Hebrew is the official language ... was 7,018,000. -- Hebrew is also used in prayer, study, and conversation by many of the roughly 9 million Jews in 137 other countries worldwide.
Hebrew and Arabic are the two official languages of Israel. Most Israelis only speak Hebrew. Some have learned Arabic in school. Arabic is the second official language in Israel, used mainly by Arab Israelis.
If you're talking about the region of the land of Israel, Hebrew and Old Canaanite were spoken before Aramaic.