What did us speak before English?

Answer and Explanation: Before English, people in the Americas spoke Spanish and various Native American languages. The Native American tribes throughout America each had their own, unique language. The first European language spoked in America was Spanish, which the Spanish conquistadors brought with them.
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What language was first spoken in America?

Spanish was the first European language spoken in the territory that is now the United States.
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What language did Native Americans speak before colonization?

Indigenous Language Families of North America

These included Algic (Algonquin), Iroquoian, Muskogean, Siouan, Athabaskan, Uto-Aztecan, Salishan and Eskimo-Aleut. In addition, there were many other smaller families, such as Sahaptian, Miwok-Costanoan, Kiowa-Tanoan and Caddoan.
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Has the US ever had an official language?

Finally, English was already used in government and as the de facto language of business. Many people didn't see a need for it to be the official language. Since then, the United States has never declared an official language.
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How did Americans get their accent?

Colonists adapted to and adopted different modes of speaking, mixing up their dialects, leveling out many regional quirks, which in turn was transferred to their innovating colonial kids, who developed it further and became the first native speakers of this new American tongue.
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Why do Americans speak English?



Why did America lose British accent?

The first is isolation; early colonists had only sporadic contact with the mother country. The second is exposure to other languages, and the colonists came into contact with Native American languages, mariners' Indian English pidgin and other settlers, who spoke Dutch, Swedish, French and Spanish.
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When did Americans lose their British accent?

Most scholars have roughly located “split off” point between American and British English as the mid-18th-Century. There are some clear exceptions.
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What is the rarest language in the US?

Chemehuevi. A Colorado River Numic language, Chemehuevi is verging on extinction and is now only spoken by a handful of people in the Midwestern United States.
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Which language no longer exists?

What Are Some Dead Languages?
  • Latin. As far as dead languages go, Latin is the most studied. ...
  • Coptic. Ancient Egyptian is one of the earliest known written languages, and it was spoken until the late 17th century in the form of Coptic. ...
  • Mandan. ...
  • Sanskrit. ...
  • Gothic. ...
  • Old Norse. ...
  • Ancient Greek.
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Which country has only one language?

According to the online reference Wikipedia, half the countries of the world have official languages. Some have only one official language, such as Albania, France, Germany and Lithuania.
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Did Native Americans have an American accent?

One of these regional accents is Native American English, known as the “rez accent.” It is spoken in many Indigenous communities in the United States and Canada.
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How did Native Americans lose their language?

Native Americans did not lose their languages. Their languages were stolen from them by immigrants to American shores who believed in assimilation, the melting pot, and the great American dream. But Native Americans were not immigrants. They were conquered peoples who were pushed off their lands and marginalized.
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What was the first language ever?

Sumerian can be considered the first language in the world, according to Mondly. The oldest proof of written Sumerian was found on the Kish tablet in today's Iraq, dating back to approximately 3500 BC.
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Do Americans only know 1 language?

In a multilingual world, the United States remains a mostly monolingual country. Even though roughly 70 million Americans speak a language other than English at home, almost 80 percent speak English only.
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What language did Jesus speak?

Most religious scholars and historians agree with Pope Francis that the historical Jesus principally spoke a Galilean dialect of Aramaic. Through trade, invasions and conquest, the Aramaic language had spread far afield by the 7th century B.C., and would become the lingua franca in much of the Middle East.
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What is the mother language of America?

The United States does not have an official language at the federal level, but the most commonly used language is English (specifically, American English), which is the de facto national language.
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What language will we speak in 2050?

Mandarin. Mandarin is likely to be the most spoken language in 2050 because of its vast number of speakers. The economic influence of China will also prove vital for the continued use and spread of Chinese languages around the world.
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What is the hardest language to speak?

Across multiple sources, Mandarin Chinese is the number one language listed as the most challenging to learn. The Defense Language Institute Foreign Language Center puts Mandarin in Category IV, which is the list of the most difficult languages to learn for English speakers.
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What are the dead languages in the United States?

Cheyenne, Cherokee, Chikasaw, Chinook, Comanche, Creek, Hopi, Kiowa Apache, Mohave, and Oneida are just some of the severely and critically endangered languages in the United States alone.
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What is the #1 language?

1. English – 1,121 million speakers. It is the most widely spoken language in the world because of the global impact of England and the United States in the last three centuries.
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Is America losing its accents?

What I came to find out during my time recording the podcast is that accents and dialects aren't dying. Instead, they are constantly changing, though usually at a very slow pace. The significance of evolving accents is actually much bigger than merely sounding different than we used to in the past.
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Which American accent is closest to British?

Possibly the closest US American accent to British (sounding and geographically) is mid-Atlantic. This is typically spoken by a US American who has lived a long time in Britain, or vice versa a Brit who spent years in the US.
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What accent came first American or British?

The “American English” we know and use today in an American accent first started out as an “England English” accent. According to a linguist at the Smithsonian, Americans began putting their own spin on English pronunciations just one generation after the colonists started arriving in the New World.
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