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  1. In Finland, the euro is the official currency, and Swedish is an official language alongside Finnish. The same spelling as in Sweden is used (officially Swedish in Finland is spelt as in Sweden). The pronunciation, however, is [ˈěuro], which has some similarities to Finnish pronunciation.

  2. Eurolinguistics is a neologistic term for the study of the languages of Europe . The term Eurolinguistics was first used by Norbert Reiter in 1991 (German equivalent: Eurolinguistik ). Apart from a series of works dealing with only a part of the European languages, the work of Harald Haarmann pursues a "pan- or trans-European perspective".

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  4. The current design of euro banknotes has the word euro written in both the Latin and Greek (Ευρώ) alphabets; the Cyrillic spelling (Eвро) was added to the new Europa series of banknotes started in 2013 (see Linguistic issues concerning the euro). Language-specific regulations Maltese

  5. In the EU, multilingualism is understood as 'the ability of societies, institutions, groups and individuals to engage, on a regular basis, with more than one language in their day-to-day lives'. The EU's multilingualism policy has three goals: to encourage language learning and promote linguistic diversity.

  6. Mar 11, 2013 · Gerhards argues that English should be the lingua franca of Europe pointing to the gains for everybody in terms of geographic mobility and integration of all peoples within the same European public sphere. English, as it appears, is already the more widespread first and second language in the EU. This reasoning heavily underestimates the ...

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