i live in slovenia :) the major language is slovenian, all young people can also speak english, but the elder ones can speak german better...
2006-08-06 00:33:05
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Detroit Michigan. Motor City We speak a broken Southern English and have melting pot of Spanish Arabic Polish and that is just for starters. I havent heard much French but it is a class in High School. I took some basic Latin.. So being on the boarder to Canada and in big view of the Airport Take time to talk to us quick and you will be surprised at what you might hear.
2006-08-06 08:48:11
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answer #2
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answered by Nina 4
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I live in southeastern Massachusetts, USA. The major languages spoken in this area is mainly English and sometimes Spanish and Portuguese. In some surrounding areas, some people speak like a French Creole.
2006-08-06 07:06:25
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answer #3
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answered by Mo 6
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I live in Switzerland, just outside Zurich. The main "language" (some would call it a dialect) spoken here is Swiss-German. In my own suburb, I hear some Italian and (I think) Albanian (I can't identify Albanian but I know a lot of Albanian-speaking people live here). And a certain amount of standard German.
In Zurich itself I hear a fair bit of English, some French, again Italian, and several others that I can't identify.
2006-08-06 08:07:44
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answer #4
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answered by Goddess of Grammar 7
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I live in the suburbs of Detroit, Michigan. Americans speak English but we have many Indians and Asians so you will hear a lot of people speaking that. There are also some Eastern Europeans, so you can hear them often. Our area is very diverse ethnically.
2006-08-06 07:08:58
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answer #5
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answered by karenmay57 2
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I live in Colorado and it is English like it should be but..why do I always hear "Push 1 On Your Phone Now For Spanish" if this is an English speaking country ?
2006-08-06 07:40:02
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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I lived till 1985 in Srilanka where we speak Tamil in northern province also over there the Majority people speak Sinhala which will be available in southern province of Srilanka.
1985 - 1993 Lived in Chennai , India there also Majority Tamil speak people but with other languages like Malayalam, Telugu, Kannada , Sowrashtira etc etc etc...
From 1994- till live in New York with English speaking people..also little bit of Spanish.. and very few my community people too...
2006-08-06 07:13:12
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answer #7
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answered by mswathi1025 4
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Pennsylvania,
English, Pennsylvania Dutch, Spanish.
To all the bigots who refuse to accept another language in our country, I grew up speaking Pennsylvania Dutch, which by the way was spoken on our homeland soil probably a century or so (circa 1750) before most of your ancestors ever came accross the atlantic on their boats so dont tell me which language I have to speak.
2006-08-06 08:04:18
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answer #8
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answered by Earthen vessel 1
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Magnolia, TX USA. The major languages are English and Spanish with a little Francais mixed in from time to time.
2006-08-06 07:29:56
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answer #9
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answered by Prodigal Son 4
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Canada - Road signs are in English so they are assuming people are just that. Except for the road signs nearing the Toronto Int'l Airport they are not in a language, they are pictures so everyone can understand.
In Quebec, they speak French first, english sub titles.
2006-08-06 07:14:57
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answer #10
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answered by peppermint_paddy 7
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I live in Poland (Europe) and we speak mainly Polish, but near the borders you can hear Russian, Ukrainian, Czech or Slovak, German, and near the Baltic Sea (the north part of the country) people speak Kashubian.
2006-08-06 07:49:12
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answer #11
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answered by ~ B ~ 4
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