  | 
Denmark | 
 Danish, Faeroese, Greenlandic (an Inuit dialect), small German-speaking minority | 
  | 
Djibouti | 
 Arabic and French (both official), Afar, Somali | 
  | 
Dominica | 
 English (official) and French patois | 
  | 
Dominican Republic | 
 Spanish, English widely spoken | 
  | 
East Timor | 
 Tetun, Indonesian, Portuguese | 
  | 
Ecuador | 
 Spanish (official), Quechua | 
  | 
Egypt | 
 Arabic | 
  | 
El Salvador | 
 Spanish | 
  | 
England | 
 English | 
  | 
Equatorial Guinea | 
 Spanish (official), French (2nd official), pidgin English, Fang, Bubi, Creole | 
  | 
Eritrea | 
 Afar, Bilen, Kunama, Nara, Arabic, Tobedawi, Saho, Tigre, Tigrinya | 
  | 
Estonia | 
 Estonian (official), Russian, Finnish, English | 
  | 
Ethiopia | 
 Amharic (official), English, Orominga, Tigrigna, over 70 languages spoken | 
  | 
European Union | 
 The European Union has eleven official languages. | 
  | 
Falkland Islands | 
English | 
  | 
Faroe Islands | 
 Faroese, Danish | 
  | 
Fiji | 
 Fijian, Hindustani, English (official) | 
  | 
Finland | 
 Finnish, Swedish (both official); small Sami- (Lapp) and Russian-speaking minorities | 
  | 
France | 
 French, declining regional dialects (Provençal, Breton, Alsatian, Corsican) | 
  | 
French Guiana | 
 French | 
  | 
Frence Polynesia | 
 French | 
  | 
Frence Southern and Antarctic Lands (Territories) | 
 French |