No. 10: French
Over 130 million inhabitants of this planet speak French. Mainly, they
can be found in France, but French's reach extends to Africa, North America as
well as in parts of Asia and South America. Up to the French Revolution,
France's imperialistic nature led to the expansion of "la langue
Française" and its presence is worldwide to this day.
No. 9: Malay-Indonesian
Malaysia and Indonesia share lots in common, one of
the main attributes being the language. There are many dialects, but the most
popular is Indonesian. Malay/Indonesian is spoken by over 170 million people, and that's a whole lotta people.
No. 8: Portuguese
After winning its independence from Spain in the
12th century, Portugal's influence expanded rapidly thanks to famous explorers
like Vasco de Gama. Because of their work, the Portuguese speaking contingency
reaches 175 million -- the bulk
of Portuguese speakers hail from Angola, Brazil, Cape Verde, France,
Guinea-Bissau, Mozambique, São Tomé, Prìncipe, and Portugal, of course.
No. 7: Bengali
India's other language, Bengali is also spoken in
Bangladesh and Singapore. In fact, Bangladesh is a country of over 120 million,
most of whom speak Bengali. Combined, there are over 210 million Bengali speaking people worldwide.
No. 6: Arabic
The official language in roughly 25 nations, over 260 million people speak Arabic, from Iraq to Morocco. Both Farsi
and Urdu use the Arabic script but differ from Arabic -- Arabic being a Semitic
language whereas Farsi and Urdu are Indo-European ones.
No. 5: Russian
Russia's vast geographic reach and populous nation
makes it sit at number 5 with 275 million speakers. But given the low life expectancy among men
there and Arabic's accelerated growth, Russia looks like it will slip in
ranking over the next decade.
No. 4: Spanish
With anywhere from 350 to 400 million speakers, many lists have Spanish surpassing English,
and by most standards, that is right. The official language in just over 20
nations including Andorra, Belize, Colombia, Cuba, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua,
Spain, U.S., and Venezuela, Spanish weighs in at numero cuatro .
No. 3: English
The "lowest common denominator," if one
were to exist, English is the universal language with 500 million speakers worldwide. The language is officially spoken
in over 50 countries, a record. Examples include: Australia, Brunei, Cameroon,
Canada, Fiji, New Zealand, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, South Africa, U.K., and
U.S., not to mention many Caribbean states.
No. 2: Hindi/Urdu
Ironically, Hindi and Urdu are essentially the same
language. In Pakistan, Hindi is modified and written in Arabic script, whereas
in India, it is written in the Devanagari script and called Hindi. Combined, 600 million human beings speak Hindi. While every expert would
assert that India's population will surpass China's, chances are that there
will always be more Mandarin-speaking people because English is widely spoken
in India, but not in China.
No. 1: Mandarin Chinese
Mandarin is spoken by over 1 billion people; making it the most widely spoken language on
Earth. Besides China, Mandarin is spoken in Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia,
Malaysia, Mongolia, Philippines, Singapore, South Africa, Taiwan, and Thailand.
Mandarin is fairly sophisticated because it can be spoken in four tones. But
once you begin, you'll have a billion people to chat with...
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