British Columbia is a predominantly English speaking province of Canada.
well Canada speaks french and English but i mostly think it is English
English
The majority are Anglophones; but almost all British Columbians speak english.
French and English are the official languages of Canada, but there is next to no French spoken in Vancouver.
After English, Cantonese, Mandarin, Korean, Tagalog, and Punjabi and some of the most common languages spoken. You would be able to live in Vancouver as a Chinese speaker quite easily. You would have great difficulty living in Vancouver as a Francophone.
English and French.
The official languages of Canada are English and French, but most people in Vancouver speak English.
French and English are the official languages of Canada, but there is next to no French spoken in Vancouver.
After English, Cantonese, Mandarin, Korean, Tagalog, and Punjabi and some of the most common languages spoken. You would be able to live in Vancouver as a Chinese speaker quite easily. You would have great difficulty living in Vancouver as a Francophone.
The official languages of Canada are English and French, but in Vancouver, most people speak English.
Most Vancouverites communicate in English.
French and English are the official languages of Canada, but there is next to no French spoken in Vancouver.
After English, Cantonese, Mandarin, Korean, Tagalog, and Punjabi and some of the most common languages spoken. You would be able to live in Vancouver as a Chinese speaker quite easily. You would have great difficulty living in Vancouver as a Francophone.
The official languages of Canada are English and French. Throughout the vast majority of Western Canada, including British Columbia, English is the main spoken language. Despite what much of popular US television shows portray there is no clear "Canadian accent" and the majority of Canadian English speakers would sound like their American counterparts.
Historically
English. But a lot of people speak Chinese, Japanese, Punjabi, and French too.
If by native language you mean the language spoken by the residents of British Columbia, the answer is English.
The official languages of Canada are English and French, but in Vancouver, most people speak English.
French
Actually there are thousands of languages in Africa..some are yet to be named to man.
Canada's Pacific province is the British Columbia.
No, British Columbia is owned by Canada.
Because British Columbia was found, settled, and founded by the British.
The University of British Columbia is in Vancouver, British Columbia. ================================================ Well, actually the University of British Columbia is located in the University Endowment Lands, just outside of and west of Vancouver.
The official language of British Columbia is English. However, there are also many communities in the province where other languages are spoken, including Punjabi, Mandarin, Tagalog, Spanish, and many Indigenous languages.
Tons, Canada is quite multicultural. Main: English. Legal: English, French Spoken: You name it, it's there
There is no such country or state as Columbia.If you mean Colombia, click here.If you mean British Columbia, click here.If you mean the District of Columbia, click here.There are also about 40 cities in the world with the name "Columbia" in it.
French and English
They spoke English.
Cities in Canada do not have official languages; only the country itself and the provinces do. The official languages of Canada are English and French. The official language of British Columbia is just English.
Wakashan
Languages that are spoken
There is no such nationality as British. This is just the name of a state 'Britain'. The languages spoken within the British Isles are 1/ English 2/ Welsh 3/ Gaelic
The top most spoken language in Colombia is Spanish, as it is the official language of the country. Other indigenous languages are also spoken by certain communities, such as Wayuu, Nasa Yuwe, EmberΓ‘, and others. English is also spoken in some tourist areas and by some residents in major cities.
Sign languages are as individually different as spoken languages, and, as an interesting side note, sign languages for dialects of the same spoken language may not be related. British Sign Language and American Sign Language are in no way mutually intelligible.
The language of the island of Tortola is English.