Abenaki Afrikaans Ainu Aklanon Alabama Albanian Algerian Amharic
Apache Arabic Aramaic Armenian ASL Avestan Ayapathu Aymara
Azeri Balinese Bamwe Bantu Basa Basque Belarusan Bemba
Bengali Berber Bicol Bisaya Bobangi Brahui Breton Butuanon
Bukusu Bulgarian Burmese Cantonese Carib Catalan Catawba Cayuga
Cebuano Chamorro Chechen Cherokee Chewa Cheyenne Chinese Chinook
Ch'ol Chorti Cispa Coptic Cree Creole Croatian Czech
Danish Delaware Demonh'ka Denya Duma Dutch Eggon Ejagham
Egyptian Ekegusii Emakua English Eskimo Esperanto Estonian Etruscan
Fang Faroese Farsi Finnish Flemish Frankish French Frisian
Fulfulde Gaelic Galician Gaulish Gamilaraay Ganda Gbari Georgian
German Gevove Gilbertese Ginyama Gothic Greek Guarani Gujarati
Gullah Haida Hakka Hawaiian Hausa Hebrew Hiligaynon Hmong
Hindi Hittite Holoholo Hungarian Icelandic Igbo Ilongo Indoeuropean
Indonesian Ingush Interlingua Inzebi Irish Ishkashmi Italian Jangshung
Japanese Jita Kalanga Kannada Kapampangan Karelian Kamviri Karuk
Katcha Kazakh Kerewe Khakas Khmer Khowar Kiga Kituba
Klallam Klingon Konkani Kongo Korean Koromfé Koyo Kurdish
Lao Lakhota Latin Latvian Lingala Lithuanian Lojban Lozi
Luwian Lycian Lydian Macedonian Malagasy Malay Maliseet Malayalam
Maltese Mambwe Manchu Mandinka Manx Maori Mapudungun Marathi
Masaba Mayan Mayangna Mawu Miami • Michif Miskitu Mixtec
Mohawk Mongolian Mpongwe Nahuatl Nande Nanticoke Nauruan Navajo
Ndebele Nepalese Newari Nhirrpi Norwegian Nyambo Nyamwezi Occitan
Ojibwe Olkola Olutec Onondaga Oriya Oscan Oykangand Pahlavi
Pakahn Pali Papiamento Pashto Pende Passam...dy Phoenician Phrygian
Pidgin Pirahã Polish Popoluca Portuguese Potawatomi Prussian Pulaar
Punjabi Quechua Quenya Rapa Nui Rasta Rejang Romanian Romany
Romansh Roviana Rotuman Russian Saanich Saami Samoan Sanskrit
Sardinian Seneca Serbian Seri Sherpa Shi Shona Shoshoni
Sign Sindarin Sinhalese Slovak Slovene Sogdian Somali Sorbian
Spanish Sranan Sûdovian Sumerian Swabian Swahili Swedish Tagalog
Taiwanese Tamasheq Tahitian Taino Tamazight Tamil Tarahumara Tarok
Tatar Telugu Tetun Thai Thracian Tibetan Tlingit Tocharian
Tongan Turkish Turkmen Twi Ukrainian Ulwa Umbrian Üqoi
Urdu Uyghur Uzbek Venda Veps Vietnamese Votic Vulcan
Wagiman Walloon Warlpiri Welsh Wolof Wyandot Xhosa Yaka
Yao Yemba Yiddish Yoruba Zarma Zoque Zulu
wow!!! imagine some1 who knows all of these :p
2006-09-15 06:59:29
·
answer #1
·
answered by ChEkNa . 4
·
1⤊
0⤋
Does it really matter. I know a person that can talk as many as 9 and sometimes gets all confused starting in one and ending with other. I know 3 and that is more than enough.
You should learn only the ones you need to go through life.
Get a translator!
2006-09-15 06:59:23
·
answer #2
·
answered by regatta87 2
·
0⤊
0⤋
"The roughly 200 languages with over a million native speakers" can be found at the source URL below.
2006-09-15 07:05:53
·
answer #3
·
answered by love2travel 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
way too many ! the major ones
English
German
Arabic
Spanish
Chinese
Russian
2006-09-15 06:58:04
·
answer #4
·
answered by lil_pinkmartian 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
too many too mention..
but Chinese.. English.. Spanish...
try to search in Google or Yahoo...
2006-09-15 07:03:22
·
answer #5
·
answered by mermaid.marie 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
ONLY ONE!!!!! JAPANESE! that is because Japan will rule the world!
2006-09-15 07:03:38
·
answer #6
·
answered by Japan_is_home 5
·
0⤊
2⤋