in the north pole (if you go now to your map) is not a single land/ice mass like the south. in the north pole, anyone living there would either speak Russian (because part of it belongs to Russia), English/French(for the parts that belong to Canada and the US-Alaska), and Greenlandic (East Inuit) Danish & English(for Greenland). those are only the "official" languages for the North Pole.
for the South Pole, or Antarctica as i like to call it, is a whole another story, and a lot less complicated. the continent has no central government and no one has laid any claim to it so there is no "official" language. the only languages spoken there are the languages of the scientific travel groups and Penguin-ese!!
2007-05-03 13:22:51
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answer #1
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answered by camrandable 2
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At the North Pole, Elvish.
2007-05-03 18:06:37
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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whatever language is the language of the country they came from considering no one is a citizen of antarctica, the only people that are there came from other countries as researchers, and the north pole, (arctic) is made up of mostly if not all canada, greenland and russia, so whatever language is spoken in those countries, northern canada could probably be innuit though .....
2007-05-03 13:06:38
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answer #3
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answered by Sean 2
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English
2007-05-03 13:08:15
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answer #4
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answered by Stef 2
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I understand your question, so that you do not favor to describe... i wager there might want to be 2 proper languages: English and Spanish. all around the continent, English and Spanish are both widely used. contained in the north part of the continent the position Cananda is, French is widely spoken, besides the indisputable fact that that is not interior something of the continent. Mexico quite slightly dominates the bottom 0.5 of the continent, with the U. S. contained in the middle. i might want to say both English and Spanish because it really is so regular. contained in the U. S., they have signs and symptoms in both English and Spanish. i'm particular they have that in Hispanic aspects of the continent too.
2016-12-05 07:45:54
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answer #5
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answered by ? 3
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no one lives in the north or south pole
2007-05-03 13:04:30
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answer #6
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answered by Lauren 2
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depends on where they came from; no one is from there.
most explorers to reach the poles have been Scandinavian; also plenty of Brits, Russians, Canadians, and Americans. For the north, there have also been Inuit guides who have gone.
2007-05-03 13:06:31
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answer #7
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answered by kent_shakespear 7
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Noone lives there. People who come there speak the language of their home country.
2007-05-03 13:08:09
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answer #8
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answered by Snowflake 7
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They don't. Their lips are frozen.
2007-05-03 13:07:39
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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