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  1. Based on the 2019 data, 52% of people who spoke Chinese and 57% of those who spoke Vietnamese at home in the United States spoke English “less than very well,” compared to the other three common languages: Spanish 39%, Tagalog 30%, and Arabic 35% (Figure 4).

  2. Percent Scandinavian Americans Scandinavian language speakers Percent speakers United States: 11,269,320: 3.8%: 200,630: 0.0% Minnesota: 1,580,776: 32.1%: 17,998: 0.3% California: 1,510,541: 3.6%: 32,745: 0.1% Washington: 739,043: 12.5%: 12,524: 0.2% Wisconsin: 728,248: 13.5%: 6,929: 0.2% Illinois: 575,991: 4.6%: 7,528: 0.0% Michigan: 403,888: ...

  3. Use of the Norwegian language in the United States was at its peak between 1900 and World War I, then declined in the 1920s and 1930s. Over one million Americans spoke Norwegian as their primary language from 1900 to World War I, and more than 3,000 Lutheran churches in the Upper Midwest used Norwegian as their sole language.

  4. Summary. Distribution. DENMARK, NORWAY, SWEDEN, FINLAND (Swedish), Germany (Danish). Introduction. The Scandinavian languages are Indo-European languages belonging, like English, to the Germanic branch. Considerable contact in past and present between the English and Scandinavian languages, as well as common outside influences, have served to ...

    • Niels Davidsen-Nielsen, Peter Harder
    • 2001
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  6. It has at least 10 million native speakers, the fourth most spoken Germanic language and the first among any other of its type in the Nordic countries overall. Swedish, like the other Nordic languages, is a descendant of Old Norse, the common language of the Germanic peoples living in Scandinavia during the Viking Age.

  7. Apr 29, 2018 · Over in North America, there are about 76,000 Swedish speakers in the United States, and about 17,000 in Canada. Why Learn Swedish? For one, Swedish is one of the easiest languages for an English speaker to learn. But that in itself does not constitute a good reason to learn a language.

  8. Minneapolis Swedish Club meeting, 1942 The Scandinavian immigrants not only built new lives in the United States; they also built a new culture. As immigrants from Scandinavia flooded into sparsely populated areas of the U.S., they helped create a particularly Scandinavian way of life, melding the varied religious, culinary, literary, and linguistic traditions that they brought with them with ...

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