European Union languages THE IBERIAN PENINSULA The Iberian Peninsula is formed by Portugal, Spain and Andorra. LANGUAGES IN IBERIAN PENINSULA The official languages in these three states: Portugal: Portuguese

Spain: Spanish, Basque, Catalan, Aragonese, Eonavian, Occitan, Asturian Leonese.

Andorra: Spanish and Catalan

Historic languages

Pre-Roman languages ● Iberian ● Tartessian The following languages were spoken in the Iberian ● Indo-European languages Peninsula before the Roman occupation and the spread of ● Celtic languages ● Celtiberian the Latin language. ● Gallaecian ● Aquitanian (probably closely related to or the same ● Lusitanian (disputed: either Italic, Celtic, Para-Celtic or as Proto-Basque) other Indo-European) ● Proto-Basque ● Sorothaptic ● Hellenic ● Ancient Greek ● Afro-Asiatic languages ● Semitic languages ● Phoenician ● Punic Migrant languages THE TOP 10 MOST ENDANGERED LANGUAGES IN EUROPE

10. CAPPADOCIAN GREEK (Greece, 2800 native speakers) 3. KARAIM (Lithuania, Crimea, , Ukraine, 80 native speakers) 9. TSAKONIAN (Greece, 200-1000 native speakers)

2. CORNISH (Cornwall, UK, 3500 native 8. WYMYSORYS (Poland, 70 native speakers) speakers)

7. (, 25-50 native speakers) 1. MANX (Isle of man, UK, 100 native speakers)

6. GOTTSCHEERISH (Slovenia, unknown native speakers)

5.UME SAMI (Sweden, 10-20 native speakers)

4. HÉRTEVIN (Turkey, 1000 native speakers)

EU COUNTRIES LANGUAGES

Albania Belarus Finland Albanian (Shqip, Tosk (Toskë) is the Belarusian, Russian Finnish (suomi) 93.4%, Swedish official dialect) 5.9% Shqip-Gheg dialect (Gegë), Greek, Belgium small Sami- and Russian- Italian Dutch 60%, French 40%, speaking minorities Andorra German less than 1% France Catalan French (français) French, Castilian, Portuguese Bosnia & Herzegovina Austria Bosnian, Croatian, Serbian Germany German, Slovene (official in Carinthia), German (Deutsch) Croatian and Hungarian (official in Burgenland) Gibraltar English Llanito (a mixture of Spanish and English), Spanish

Bulgaria Bulgarian Danish (dansk) Turkish Greenlandic Inuktitut (Kalaallisut), Danish Croatia Croatian (hrvatski) Estonian (eesti keel) Hungary Russian, Ukrainian, Finnish Hungarian (magyar) Cyprus German, Romanian Greek, Turkish, English Faroese, Danish Icelandic Czech English, Nordic languages, Czech (cestina) Greece German widely spoken. Greek (elliniká, the Koine- Demotic version) Turkish (Northern Greece) Ireland Lithuania Malta Irish (Gaeilge), English (generally Lithuanian (lietuviu kalba) Maltese (Malti) used), Polish, Russian English

Luxembourg Moldova Italy (LÎtzebuergesch, Moldovan (virtually the same as the Italian (italiano) the everyday spoken language), Romanian language),

French (administrative Russian, Gagauz (a Turkish dialect) Latvia language), German Monaco Latvian (latviesu valoda) (administrative language) French Lithuanian, Russian Monegasque, English, Italian, Liechtenstein Macedonia, Rep Montenegro German Macedonian 68%, Albanian 25% Serbo-Croatian (Ijekavian dialect -

official)

Netherlands Portugal Serbia Dutch (Nederlands, official language), Portuguese (português) Serbian 95%, Albanian 5% Frisian (official language) Romania Slovakia Romanian (romana) Slovak (slovensky jazyk) Norwegian ( and bokmal) Hungarian, German Hungarian small Sami- and Finnish-speaking Russian Federation minorities Russian Spain Poland Spanish (español - the Castilian Polish (polski) San Marino version) 74%, Catalan 17%, Slovenia Italian Galician 7%, Basque 2% Slovenian (slovenski jezik)

Sweden United Kingdom Swedish (svenska) English small Sami- and Finnish-speaking minorities. Welsh (about 26% of the population of Wales), Scottish form of Switzerland Gaelic (about 60,000 in ) German 63.7%, French 19.2%, Italian 7.6%, Vatican City State Romansch 0.6% Latin, Italian French and various other languages. Turkey Turkish (türkçe) Kurdish, Arabic, Armenian, Greek Ukraine Ukrainian

T A I S N I N U S