yes of course ,but there are countries that have people that think that they're snob or special and try to over-speak English and Arabic.many foreign words are used in our daily lives such as "chocolate,television...ect " but pronounced differently. Like other countries they do speak other languages as secondary. There is a misconception that Lebanese people don't speak Arabic , well I am Lebanese and we do talk Arabic in 99% of our conversations , but some conversations between people is in French ( since France was present in Lebanon in 1900's ) and French language is an official language in Lebanon.
The Songhai people primarily spoke the Songhai language, which is a Niger-Congo language belonging to the Nilo-Saharan language family. It is still spoken by some communities in present-day Niger, Mali, Burkina Faso, and Benin.
if you mean in Modern day Upper Egypt it's Arabic but back them in the Kingdom of Egypt they spoke Coptic which is still Spoken by the Coptic Christian Population of Egypt
The difference is that dialect is different ways of speaking the same language and diction is how a person physically sounds when speaking it, also known as having an accent. To expand more on dialect, one example I can think of is in the Arabic language. There are many different dialects, such as Egyptian Arabic or Iraqi Arabic. The point is that it is still Arabic, just a few differences in the words spoken. If you still need clarification I will use the word Hello. I am currently taking a class on Modern Standard Arabic and "Hello" in Arabic is "Marhaba". However, in another dialectm, "Hello" is pronounced "Marhaban". They have the same meaning, just spoken differently.
Yes. It is still spoken in Ireland, Scotland, the Isle of Man as well as in the countries to which Gaelic speakers have emigrated. BTW, 'Gaelic' is subdivided into three distinct languages; there is no single Gaelic language.
Sanskrit is part of an trio of languages along side Greek and Latin. It was spoken in ancient India . Currently the language is still spoken in India.
-They are both capital cities (Djibouti of Djibouti, Paris of France) -They are both the largest cities in their countries -French is spoken primarily in both cities (Djibouti also has Arabic) -France used to own Djibouti, and obviously still owns Paris
Some Arabic is spoken in Mali, simply because it borders on several countries that border the "Arab World" where Arabic is established as the language spoken. The majority of the country, however, speaks the native language Bambara and a certain percent still uses French.
Arabic wasn't created. Also there were and still are many widely spoken languages.
-They are both capital cities (Djibouti of Djibouti, Paris of France) -They are both the largest cities in their countries -French is spoken primarily in both cities (Djibouti also has Arabic) -France used to own Djibouti, and obviously still owns Paris
It is used throughout the Arabic speaking countries and in some others.
Yes, some Semitic languagesare still spoken today. Arabic and Hebrew are examples.
English was spoken in both countries. It still is.
The Songhai people primarily spoke the Songhai language, which is a Niger-Congo language belonging to the Nilo-Saharan language family. It is still spoken by some communities in present-day Niger, Mali, Burkina Faso, and Benin.
if you mean in Modern day Upper Egypt it's Arabic but back them in the Kingdom of Egypt they spoke Coptic which is still Spoken by the Coptic Christian Population of Egypt
You probably mean '....die out in certain countries' (and you need to specify the countries). Spanish is still spoken in Spain, and in many countries around the world.
The difference is that dialect is different ways of speaking the same language and diction is how a person physically sounds when speaking it, also known as having an accent. To expand more on dialect, one example I can think of is in the Arabic language. There are many different dialects, such as Egyptian Arabic or Iraqi Arabic. The point is that it is still Arabic, just a few differences in the words spoken. If you still need clarification I will use the word Hello. I am currently taking a class on Modern Standard Arabic and "Hello" in Arabic is "Marhaba". However, in another dialectm, "Hello" is pronounced "Marhaban". They have the same meaning, just spoken differently.
It's Arabic. It's the official language of all the 5 Maghreb countries (Morocco, Tunisia, Algeria, Libya, & Mauritania), in addition to other non-official languages such as French which is widely spoken in Morocco, Tunisia, & Algeria, and Berber which is spoken in Morocco, Algeria, and some communities in Tunisia, Mauritania, & Libya.