List of multilingual countries and regions
Main article:
MultilingualismThis is an incomplete list of areas with either multilingualism at the community level or at the personal level.
There is a distinction between social and personal bilingualism. Many countries, such as
Belgium, which are officially multilingual, may have many monolinguals in their population. Officially monolingual countries, on the other hand, such as
France, can have sizable multilingual populations.
=Africa=
*a majority of the population in sub-Saharan
Africa is multilingual.
*Under its 1996 Constitution,
South Africa has 11 official languages including
Zulu,
Xhosa,
Afrikaans and
English.
*In
Kenya, educated people will typically speak a minimum of three languages: a
tribal language (such as
Bukusu), the national language –
Swahili, and
English, which is the medium used in teaching all over the country.
*
Mauritius, children are taught
Mauritian Creole, French, and English.
=Americas=
*
Canada is officially bilingual under the
Official Languages Act and the
Constitution of Canada that require the federal government to deliver services in both official languages. As well, minority language rights are guaranteed where numbers warrant. Approximately 15% of Canadians speak
French with another 18% speaking both
English and
French.
See Bilingualism in Canada:*The Canadian province of
New Brunswick, with a large
Acadian population (35% French-speaking), is the only province in Canada with two official languages.:*The
Canadian province of
Quebec, (10% English-speaking) Note: Although there is a relatively sizable English-speaking population in Quebec, French is the only official language. At the same time, most government services are available in English and French.:*There are also significant French language minorities in the provinces of
Manitoba,
Nova Scotia,
Ontario and
Prince Edward Island. Though these provinces are not officially bilingual they do provide a number of services in French.:*
Nunavut is a
Canadian territory with a population that is 85%
Inuit. Its official languages are the Inuit dialects of
Inuktitut and
Inuinnaqtun as well as English and French.:*In many of Canada's
First Nations' communities in the more isolated regions, aboriginal languages are retained. English and French are accepted in the community at the community elders discretion. :*In the 2006 Canadian census, information and questions are available in sixty-two languages, including eighteen First Nation languages.
*In the
Netherlands Antilles and
Aruba, where
Dutch is the official language, but most inhabitants of
Curaçao,
Aruba and
Bonaire are multilingual and speak
Papiamentu, Dutch, English and
Spanish.
*
Paraguay, 48% of its population is bilingual in
Guaraní and Spanish, of whom 37% speak only Guaraní and 8% only Spanish but the latter increases with the use of
Jopará.
*
USA:*Three US states are officially bilingual:
Louisiana (English and French),
New Mexico (English and Spanish, and
Hawai'i (English and
Hawaiian). :*Three US territories are also bilingual:
American Samoa (
Samoan and English),
Guam (English and
Chamorro), and
Puerto Rico (Spanish and English). One US territory is trilingual:
Northern Marianas Islands (English, Chamorro, and
Carolinian):Furthermore, in
Florida, at the municipal level,
HIaleah recognizes both English and Spanish while
Miami recnognizes English,
French Creole, and Spanish as official government languages.
=Asia=
*In
China,
Putonghua is the
official language, yet local dialects of
spoken variants of
Chinese, such as
Standard Cantonese (
Cantonese) or the
Shanghai dialect (
Wu), are spoken in daily life. In the
autonomous regions, minority languages are widely used (such as
Tibetan in
Tibet or
Mongolian in
Inner Mongolia).
*In
Hong Kong, both
English and
Chinese are official languages. While
Cantonese is the dominant Chinese language, and
Putonghua is also spoken. These three languages are taught in schools, and are mandatory subjects.
*In
Macau, both
Chinese and
Portuguese are official languages. While
Cantonese is the dominant Chinese language, and
Putonghua is also spoken. Chinese is taught in all schools, while Portuguese is mainly taught in government schools. In addition, English is also taught in many schools.
*
India: Eighteen official languages. The largest,
Hindi, is spoken natively by 18% of the population and is largely understood by educated Indians.
English is also widely understood, although mainly in urban parts of the country. An Indian with a high-school education would generally be trilingual - speaking his own native language, in addition to
Hindi and
English, with varying fluency, both the languages being compulsorily taught in most schools and colleges. For more information, see
Indian languages.
*Most people in
Indonesia are bilingual at an early age. They speak a local native language with their families whereas the official language
Indonesian which is used to communicate with people from other regions and is taught in schools as a compulsory subject. Indonesia has over two hundred native languages.
*Many people in
Malaysia are bilingual while Malaysians of Chinese and Indian descent may be trilingual.
Malay, the official language of the country, is a compulsory subject learnt in all public schools, and English is the language of instruction for Science and Math. Tamil and several Chinese dialects can also be heard. The indigenious peoples of Sabah and Sarawak speak their ancestral languages (Dayak etc). Multilinguilism is common in Malaysia, most notably among the Chinese and Indian communities.
*Many
Koreans living in
Japan speak both
Korean and
Japanese*
Philippines:
Filipino and
English are official languages in the constitution. People in native Tagalog areas are usually bilingual, while in non-Tagalog speaking areas it's common to be trilingual in the native language, Filipino and English.
*
Singapore:
English,
Mandarin Chinese,
Malay and
Tamil are all official languages. As English links the different races, a group with diverse races communicate using English. In addition to English, individuals speak their ethnic language, a dialect, and usually have some proficiency with a third language.
*
Sri Lanka.
Sinhala and
Tamil are official languages.
*
Taiwan: Mandarin Chinese is the "official" language, but
Taiwanese(Southern Fujian) is commonly use in most people in southern Taiwan and most adult in nothern Taiwan. In the Hakka community, some people are even trilingual in Hakka, Mandarin and Taiwanese.
=Europe=
see also European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages*
Belgium has 3 official languages:
Dutch (60%) in North,
French (35%) in the South and a small minority speaks
German. Its bilingual capital,
Brussels, is mainly French (15% Dutch). Most young Belgians also speak English, although not official language.
*
Finland (5.5%
Finland-Swedish,
Åland unilingually Swedish). Most Finns are also fluent in
English.
*
Ireland, where three languages have some form of official status. In the
Republic of Ireland,
Irish (one of the
Goidelic languages) is the first official language while English is the second. Approximately 1.5 million Irish citizens are either fluent or semi-fluent in Irish, making it by far the most commonly spoken Goidelic language. However English is far more commonly used as less than 3% speak Irish as their 1st language and they are all located in the remote Gaeltacht regions.
Ulster Scots, a variety of
Scots, is spoken by some in northern regions, but again English is far more commonly used and Ulster Scots is less actively used in media. Irish and Ulster Scots now both have official status in the
Northern Ireland as part of the 1998
Belfast Agreement.
*
Italy. The official language overall the nation is italian, while bilingualism is applied in some territories. In the province of
Bolzano/Bozen (
South Tirol)
german language is co-official in force of international treaties with Austria and the situation of this land represents one of the most representative case of bilingualism. In the
Aosta Valley region french is co-official, as
slovene in some municipalities of the provinces of
Trieste and
Gorizia. Ladin municipalities of South Tirol are trilingual (italian, german and ladin). Italian law n. 482/1999 enforce bilingualism also in
Sardinia (with
sardinian language),
Friuli (with
friulian language), western alps in
Piedmont (with
occitan) and other minorities.
*
Luxembourg is a rare example of a truly trilingual society, in that it not only has three official languages,
Luxembourgish,
French and
German, but has a trilingual education system. For the first four years, Luxembourgish is the medium of instruction, before giving way to German, which in turn gives way to French. (In addition, children learn
English and another European language, usually
Spanish or
Italian.) Similarly in the country's
parliament, debates are conducted in Luxembourgish, draft legislation is drafted in German, while the statute laws are in French.
*ex-Soviet republics and Warsaw Pact countries: many people fluently speak
Russian, especially in Slavic countries within the area of the former USSR (typically in
Belarus,
Ukraine. However few
Poles,
Slovaks and
Czech people speak Russian, despite huge expenditure in the past)
**
Republics of Russia. The language of
titular nation is also official in those republics.
Chuvash,
Bashkir and
Mari residents of
Tatarstan also use to speak 3 language: own, Russian and Tatar.
**
Abkhazia. Elder generation of
Abkhaz spoke
Georgian, Russian and
Abkhaz language*Parts of
Lower Silesia voivodship of Poland, where live many people for which
German is mother tongue
*
Switzerland has three official languages :
German,
French and
Italian as well as a fourth national language
Romansh. In the German speaking part of Switzerland, children learn
Swiss German at home as their mothertongue and learn German at school, as their second language. Most Swiss learn a second national language at school, in addition to
English. The cantons
Valais,
Fribourg and
Bern are bilingual (French and German), while canton
Graubünden is trilingual (German, Romansh and Italian).
*
Spain, where many regions have more than one official language:
Euskadi and
Navarra (
Basque-Spanish),
Galicia (
Galego-Spanish),
Valencia,
Balearic Islands and
Catalonia (Catalan-Spanish), but especially in
Catalonia, where
Spanish and
Catalan both enjoy great social esteem and are both used in almost every social situation)
*
Sweden.
Tornedalen and
Haparanda in
North Bothnia,
Finnish-speaking. Most Swedes are also fluent in English.
*
Wales, and to a lesser extent other Celtic-speaking regions of the
UK, and
London*In most countries of Former
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia,
Serbian,
Croatian, and
Bosnian is understood by all three groups (see
Serbo-Croatian)
=Oceania=
*In
New Zealand, approximately 10% of the population has some reasonable degree of bilingualism with English and
Māori, mostly among the Māori themselves; few are fully fluent in Māori.