 |
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 |