Languages of Europe#Romance

{{Short description|none}}

{{More citations needed|date=July 2019}}

File:Languages of Europe.svg

{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2020}}

There are over 250 languages indigenous to Europe, and most belong to the Indo-European language family.{{Cite web |author-link=Ethnologue |title=Ethnologue: Statistics |url=https://www.ethnologue.com/statistics/#area |access-date=December 23, 2023 |website=Ethnologue |edition=26}}{{Cite web |title=European Day of Languages > Facts > Language Facts |url=https://edl.ecml.at/Facts/LanguageFacts/tabid/1859/language/en-GB/Default.aspx |access-date=2023-12-23 |website=edl.ecml.at}} Out of a total European population of 744 million as of 2018, some 94% are native speakers of an Indo-European language. The three largest phyla of the Indo-European language family in Europe are Romance, Germanic, and Slavic; they have more than 200 million speakers each, and together account for close to 90% of Europeans.

Smaller phyla of Indo-European found in Europe include Hellenic (Greek, {{circa}} 13 million), Baltic ({{circa}} 4.5 million), Albanian ({{circa}} 7.5 million), Celtic ({{circa}} 4 million), and Armenian ({{circa}} 4 million). Indo-Aryan, though a large subfamily of Indo-European, has a relatively small number of languages in Europe, and a small number of speakers (Romani, {{circa}} 1.5 million). However, a number of Indo-Aryan languages not native to Europe are spoken in Europe today.

Of the approximately 45 million Europeans speaking non-Indo-European languages, most speak languages within either the Uralic or Turkic families. Still smaller groups — such as Basque (language isolate), Semitic languages (Maltese, {{circa}} 0.5 million), and various languages of the Caucasus — account for less than 1% of the European population among them. Immigration has added sizeable communities of speakers of African and Asian languages, amounting to about 4% of the population,{{cite web|title=International migrant stock: By destination and origin|url=https://www.un.org/en/development/desa/population/migration/data/estimates2/estimatesorigin.shtml|publisher=United Nations}} with Arabic being the most widely spoken of them.

Five languages have more than 50 million native speakers in Europe: Russian, German, French, Italian, and English. Russian is the most-spoken native language in Europe,{{Cite web |last=Emery |first=Chad |date=2022-12-15 |title=34 of the Most Spoken Languages in Europe: Key Facts and Figures |url=https://www.langoly.com/most-spoken-languages-in-europe/ |access-date=2023-12-23 |website=Langoly |language=en-US}} and English has the largest number of speakers in total, including some 200 million speakers of English as a second or foreign language. (See English language in Europe.)

Indo-European languages

{{See also|Indo-European languages|List of Indo-European languages}}

The Indo-European language family is descended from Proto-Indo-European, which is believed to have been spoken thousands of years ago. Early speakers of Indo-European daughter languages most likely expanded into Europe with the incipient Bronze Age, around 4,000 years ago (Bell-Beaker culture).

= Germanic =

[[File:Germanic languages in Europe.png|300px|thumb|right|

The present-day distribution of the Germanic languages in Europe:{{parabreak}}

North Germanic languages

{{legend|#02FDFF|Icelandic}}

{{legend|#1FC5FC|Faroese}}

{{legend|#0080FF|Norwegian}}

{{legend|#003F80|Swedish}}

{{legend|#0433FF|Danish}}

West Germanic Languages

{{legend|#FCA502|English}}

{{legend|#FD7B24|Scots}}

{{legend|#E2BD00|Frisian}}

{{legend|#FFF435|Dutch}}

{{legend|#ADFF2F|Low German}}

{{legend|#018000|High German}}

Dots indicate areas where multilingualism is common.]]

The Germanic languages make up the predominant language family in Western, Northern and Central Europe. It is estimated that over 500 million Europeans are speakers of Germanic languages,{{Citation |title=Germanic languages |date=2025-01-03 |work=Wikipedia |url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germanic_languages#CITEREFK%C3%B6nigvan_der_Auwera1994 |access-date=2025-01-13 |language=en}} the largest groups being German ({{circa}} 95 million), English ({{circa}} 400 million){{citation needed|date=January 2024}}, Dutch ({{circa}} 24 million), Swedish ({{circa}} 10 million), Danish ({{circa}} 6 million), Norwegian ({{circa}} 5 million){{Cite web |last=Sipka |first=Danko |date=2022 |title=The Geography of Words |url=https://assets.cambridge.org/97811088/41658/index/9781108841658_index.pdf |access-date=December 23, 2023 |website=Cambridge University Press}} and Limburgish (c. 1.3 million).{{Citation needed|date=August 2022}}

There are two extant major sub-divisions: West Germanic and North Germanic. A third group, East Germanic, is now extinct; the only known surviving East Germanic texts are written in the Gothic language. West Germanic is divided into Anglo-Frisian (including English), Low German, Low Franconian (including Dutch) and High German (including Standard German).{{Cite journal |last1=Versloot |first1=Arjen |last2=Adamczyk |first2=Elzbieta |date=2017-01-01 |title=The Geography and Dialects of Old Saxon: River-basin communication networks and the distributional patterns of North Sea Germanic features in Old Saxon |url=https://www.academia.edu/19757571 |journal=Frisians and Their North Sea Neighbours |pages=125|doi=10.1515/9781787440630-014 }}

==Anglo-Frisian==

{{Main|Anglo-Frisian languages|English language in Europe}}

The Anglo-Frisian language family is now mostly represented by English (Anglic), descended from the Old English language spoken by the Anglo-Saxons:

  • English, the main language of the United Kingdom and the most widespread language in the Republic of Ireland, also spoken as a second or third language by many Europeans.{{Cite web |title=The Evolution of English: Contribution of European Languages |url=https://www.98thpercentile.com/blog/the-evolution-of-english-contributions-of-european-languages/ |access-date=2023-12-16 |website=www.98thpercentile.com |language=en}}
  • Scots, spoken in Scotland and Ulster, recognized by some as a language and by others as a dialect of English{{Cite web |date=2023-12-05 |title=Scots language {{!}} History, Examples, & Facts {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Scots-language |access-date=2023-12-23 |website=www.britannica.com |language=en}} (not to be confused with Scots-Gaelic of the Celtic language family).

The Frisian languages are spoken by about 400,000 ({{as of|2015|lc=y}}) Frisians,{{Cite journal |last1=Kuipers-Zandberg |first1=Helga |last2=Kircher |first2=Ruth |date=2020-11-01 |title=The Objective and Subjective Ethnolinguistic Vitality of West Frisian: Promotion and Perception of a Minority Language in the Netherlands |journal=Sustainable Multilingualism |language=en |volume=17 |issue=1 |pages=1–25 |doi=10.2478/sm-2020-0011|s2cid=227129146 |doi-access=free }}{{Citation |last=Winter |first=Christoph |title=Frisian |date=2022-12-21 |url=https://oxfordre.com/linguistics/display/10.1093/acrefore/9780199384655.001.0001/acrefore-9780199384655-e-938 |encyclopedia=Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Linguistics |access-date=2023-05-21 |language=en |doi=10.1093/acrefore/9780199384655.013.938 |isbn=978-0-19-938465-5|url-access=subscription }} who live on the southern coast of the North Sea in the Netherlands and Germany. These languages include West Frisian, East Frisian (of which the only surviving dialect is Saterlandic) and North Frisian.

==Dutch==

{{Main|Dutch language#Europe{{!}}Dutch-speaking Europe|Dutch language|Low Franconian}}

Dutch is spoken throughout the Netherlands, the northern half of Belgium, as well as the Nord-Pas de Calais region of France. The traditional dialects of the Lower Rhine region of Germany are linguistically more closely related to Dutch than to modern German. In Belgian and French contexts, Dutch is sometimes referred to as Flemish. Dutch dialects are numerous and varied.{{Cite web |date=2023-12-15 |title=Dutch language {{!}} Definition, Origin, History, Countries, Examples, & Facts {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Dutch-language |access-date=2023-12-23 |website=www.britannica.com |language=en}}

==German==

{{Main|German language|Geographical distribution of German speakers}}

German is spoken throughout Germany, Austria, Liechtenstein, much of Switzerland, northern Italy (South Tyrol), Luxembourg, the East Cantons of Belgium and the Alsace and Lorraine regions of France.{{Cite web |title=German, Standard {{!}} Ethnologue Free |url=https://www.ethnologue.com/language/deu/ |access-date=2023-12-23 |website=Ethnologue (Free All) |language=en}}

There are several groups of German dialects:

====Low German====

Low German is spoken in various regions throughout Northern Germany and the northern and eastern parts of the Netherlands.{{Cite web |date=2023-12-28 |title=All You Need To Know About The Official Languages Of Germany |url=https://gtelocalize.com/about-the-official-languages-of-germany/#Looking-for-a-reliable-German-Translation-Service |access-date=2025-01-13 |website=gtelocalize.com |language=en-US}} It may be separated into West Low German and East Low German.{{Cite book |last=Russ |first=Charles |date=2013-09-13 |title=The Dialects of Modern German |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315001777 |doi=10.4324/9781315001777|isbn=9781315001777 }}

==North Germanic (Scandinavian)==

The North Germanic languages are spoken in Nordic countries and include

Swedish (Sweden and parts of Finland),

Danish (Denmark),

Norwegian (Norway),

Icelandic (Iceland),

Faroese (Faroe Islands),

and Elfdalian (in a small part of central Sweden).{{cite book |last1=Louden |first1=Mark L. |title=The Cambridge Handbook of Germanic Linguistics |date=2020 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-1-108-42186-7 |pages=807–832 |url=https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108378291.035 |chapter=Minority Germanic Languages}}

English has a long history of contact with Scandinavian languages, given the immigration of Scandinavians early in the history of Britain, and shares various features with the Scandinavian languages.{{cite web|url=https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/11/121127094111.htm|title=Linguist makes sensational claim: English is a Scandinavian language|website=ScienceDaily|access-date=2016-03-06}} Even so, especially Dutch and Swedish, but also Danish and Norwegian, have strong vocabulary connections to the German language.{{Cite web |date=2019-02-21 |title=Linguistic variety in the Nordics |url=https://nordics.info/show/artikel/linguistic-variety-in-the-nordic-region |access-date=2023-11-06 |website=nordics.info |language=en}}{{Cite journal |last1=Gooskens |first1=Charlotte |last2=Kürschner |first2=Sebastian |last3=Heuven |first3=Vincent J. van |date=August 4, 2021 |title=The role of loanwords in the intelligibility of written Danish among Swedes |journal=Nordic Journal of Linguistics |language=en |volume=45 |issue=1 |pages=4–29 |doi=10.1017/S0332586521000111 |issn=0332-5865|doi-access=free |hdl=1887/3205273 |hdl-access=free }}{{Cite journal |last1=Gooskens |first1=Charlotte |last2=van Heuven |first2=Vincent J. |last3=Golubović |first3=Jelena |last4=Schüppert |first4=Anja |last5=Swarte |first5=Femke |last6=Voigt |first6=Stefanie |date=2018-04-03 |title=Mutual intelligibility between closely related languages in Europe |journal=International Journal of Multilingualism |language=en |volume=15 |issue=2 |pages=169–193 |doi=10.1080/14790718.2017.1350185 |issn=1479-0718|doi-access=free |hdl=1887/79190 |hdl-access=free }}

= Romance =

{{Further|Romance languages|Italic languages}}{{See also|Latins}}File:Romance 20c en.png

Roughly 215 million Europeans (primarily in Southern and Western Europe) are native speakers of Romance languages, the largest groups including:{{Citation needed|date=August 2022}}

French ({{circa}} 72 million),

Italian ({{circa}} 65 million),

Spanish ({{circa}} 40 million),

Romanian ({{circa}} 24 million),

Portuguese ({{circa}} 10 million),

Catalan ({{circa}} 7 million),

Neapolitan ({{circa}} 6 million),

Sicilian ({{circa}} 5 million),

Venetian ({{circa}} 4 million),

Galician ({{circa}} 2 million),

Sardinian ({{circa}} 1 million),{{cite book |author=Ti Alkire |title=Romance languages: a Historical Introduction |author2=Carol Rosen |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2010 |location=New York |page=3}}{{cite book |author=Sergio Lubello |title=Manuale Di Linguistica Italiana, Manuals of Romance linguistics |publisher=De Gruyter |year=2016 |page=499}}This includes all of the varieties of Sardinian, written with any orthography (the LSC, used for all of Sardinian, or the Logudorese, Nugorese and Campidanese orthographies, only used for some dialects of it) but does not include Gallurese and Sassarese, that even though they have sometimes been included in a supposed Sardinian "macro-language" are actually considered by all Sardinian linguists two different transitional languages between Sardinian and Corsican (or, in the case of Gallurese, are sometimes classified as a variant of Corsican). For Gallurese: [http://maxia-mail.doomby.com/medias/files/atti-def-2015.compressed.pdf ATTI DEL II CONVEGNO INTERNAZIONALE DI STUDI Ciurrata di la Linga Gadduresa, 2014], for Sassarese: {{cite book |last=Maxia |first=Mauro |title=Studi sardo-corsi. Dialettologia e storia della lingua tra le due isole |year=2010 |location=Sassari |publisher=Taphros |page=58 |language=it |quote=La tesi che individua nel sassarese una base essenzialmente toscana deve essere riesaminata alla luce delle cospicue migrazioni corse che fin dall'età giudicale interessarono soprattutto il nord della Sardegna. In effetti, che il settentrione della Sardegna, almeno dalla metà del Quattrocento, fosse interessato da un forte presenza corsa si può desumere da diversi punti di osservazione. Una delle prove più evidenti è costituita dall'espressa citazione che di questo fenomeno fa il cap. 42 del secondo libro degli Statuti del comune di Sassari, il quale fu aggiunto nel 1435 o subito dopo. Se si tiene conto di questa massiccia presenza corsa e del fatto che la presenza pisana nel regno di Logudoro cessò definitivamente entro il Duecento, l'origine del fondo toscano non andrà attribuita a un influsso diretto del pisano antico ma del corso che rappresenta, esso stesso, una conseguenza dell'antica toscanizzazione della Corsica}}). They are legally considered two different languages by the Sardinian Regional Government too ({{cite web |author=Autonomous Region of Sardinia |date=1997-10-15 |title=Legge Regionale 15 ottobre 1997, n. 26 |url=http://www.regione.sardegna.it/j/v/86?v=9&c=72&s=1&file=1997026 |access-date=2008-06-16 |pages=Art. 2, paragraph 4 |language=it |archive-date=1 March 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210301195804/http://www.regione.sardegna.it/j/v/86?v=9&c=72&s=1&file=1997026 |url-status=dead }}).

Occitan ({{circa}} 500,000), besides numerous smaller communities.

The Romance languages evolved from varieties of Vulgar Latin spoken in the various parts of the Roman Empire in Late Antiquity. Latin was itself part of the (otherwise extinct) Italic branch of Indo-European.{{Cite web |date=2025-02-06 |title=Romance languages {{!}} Definition, Origin, Characteristics, Classification, Map, & Facts {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Romance-languages |access-date=2025-02-27 |website=www.britannica.com |language=en}} Romance languages are divided phylogenetically into Italo-Western, Eastern Romance (including Romanian) and Sardinian. The Romance-speaking area of Europe is occasionally referred to as Latin Europe.{{cite book |last1=Friedman |first1=Lawrence |last2=Perez-Perdomo |first2=Rogelio |date=2003 |title=Legal Culture in the Age of Globalization: Latin America and Latin Europe |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wEMUKyPTE9AC&q=%22latin+europe%22 |publisher=Stanford University Press |page=1 |isbn=0-8047-6695-9 |author-link1=Lawrence M. Friedman }}

Italo-Western can be further broken down into the Italo-Dalmatian languages (sometimes grouped with Eastern Romance), including the Tuscan-derived Italian and numerous local Romance languages in Italy as well as Dalmatian, and the Western Romance languages. The Western Romance languages in turn separate into the Gallo-Romance languages, including Langues d'oïl such as French, the Francoprovencalic languages Arpitan and Faetar, the Rhaeto-Romance languages, and the Gallo-Italic languages; the Occitano-Romance languages, grouped with either Gallo-Romance or East Iberian, including Occitanic languages such as Occitan and Gardiol, and Catalan; Aragonese, grouped in with either Occitano-Romance or West Iberian, and finally the West Iberian languages, including the Astur-Leonese languages, the Galician-Portuguese languages, and the Castilian languages.{{Citation needed|date=August 2022}}

= Slavic =

{{See also|Slavic languages|Slavs}}

[[File:Slavic europe (Kosovo unshaded).svg|thumb|300px|Political map of Europe with countries where the national language is Slavic:

{{legend|#7cdc87|West Slavic languages}}

{{legend|#008000|East Slavic languages}}

{{legend|#004040|South Slavic languages}}]]

Slavic languages are spoken in large areas of Southern, Central and Eastern Europe. An estimated 315 million people speak a Slavic language,{{Cite web |date=2023-11-02 |title=Slavic languages {{!}} List, Definition, Origin, Map, Tree, History, & Number of Speakers {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Slavic-languages |access-date=2023-12-22 |website=www.britannica.com |language=en}} the largest groups being

Russian ({{circa}} 110 million in European Russia and adjacent parts of Eastern Europe, Russian forming the largest linguistic community in Europe),

Polish ({{circa}} 40 million{{e27|pol|Polish}}),

Ukrainian ({{circa}} 33 million{{e27|ukr|Ukrainian}}),

Serbo-Croatian ({{circa}} 18 million{{e27|hbs|Serbo-Croatian}}),

Czech ({{circa}} 11 million{{e27|ces|Czech}}),

Bulgarian ({{circa}} 8 million{{e27|bul|Bulgarian}}),

Slovak ({{circa}} 5 million{{e27|slk|Slovak}}),

Belarusian (c. 3.7 million{{e27|bel|Belarusian}}), Slovene ({{circa}} 2.3 million{{e27|slv|Slovene}})

and Macedonian ({{circa}} 1.6 million{{cite web |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Macedonian-language |title=Macedonian Language |author= |date=12 January 2024|website=Britannica |publisher= Encyclopaedia Britannica |access-date=24 March 2024 |quote=}}).

Phylogenetically, Slavic is divided into three subgroups:{{Cite web |title=Slavic {{!}} Ethnologue Free |url=https://www.ethnologue.com/subgroup/4249/ |access-date=2023-12-22 |website=Ethnologue (Free All) |language=en}}

= Others =

  • Greek ({{circa}} 13 million) is the official language of Greece and Cyprus, and there are Greek-speaking enclaves in Albania, Bulgaria, Italy, North Macedonia, Romania, Georgia, Ukraine, Lebanon, Egypt, Israel, Jordan, and Turkey, and in Greek communities around the world. Dialects of modern Greek that originate from Attic Greek (through Koine and then Medieval Greek) are Cappadocian, Pontic, Cretan, Cypriot, Katharevousa, and Yevanic.{{Citation needed|date=August 2022}}
  • Italiot Greek is, debatably, a Doric dialect of Greek. It is spoken in southern Italy only, in the southern Calabria region (as Grecanic)F. Violi, Lessico Grecanico-Italiano-Grecanico, Apodiafàzzi, Reggio Calabria, 1997.Paolo Martino, L'isola grecanica dell'Aspromonte. Aspetti sociolinguistici, 1980. Risultati di un'inchiesta del 1977Filippo Violi, Storia degli studi e della letteratura popolare grecanica, C.S.E. Bova (RC), 1992Filippo Condemi, Grammatica Grecanica, Coop. Contezza, Reggio Calabria, 1987;{{cite web|url=http://www.treccani.it/magazine/lingua_italiana/speciali/minoranze/Romano.html|title=In Salento e Calabria le voci della minoranza linguistica greca|website=Treccani, l'Enciclopedia italiana}} and in the Salento region (as Griko). It was studied by the German linguist Gerhard Rohlfs during the 1930s and 1950s.{{cite journal |author1=Gerhard Rohlfs |author2=Salvatore Sicuro |title=Grammatica storica dei dialetti italogreci |url=https://cir.nii.ac.jp/crid/1130000797628384384 |journal=(No Title) |access-date=8 June 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240420152930/https://cir.nii.ac.jp/crid/1130000797628384384 |archive-date=20 April 2024 |language=it |url-status=live}}
  • Tsakonian is a Doric dialect of the Greek language spoken in the lower Arcadia region of the Peloponnese around the village of Leonidio{{cite web | last=Dansby | first=Angela | title=The last speakers of ancient Sparta | website=BBC Home | date=December 16, 2020 | url=https://www.bbc.com/travel/article/20201215-the-last-speakers-of-ancient-sparta | access-date=February 6, 2024}}

File:Baltic languages.png

  • The Baltic languages are spoken in Lithuania (Lithuanian ({{circa}} 3 million), Samogitian) and Latvia (Latvian ({{circa}} 1.5 million), Latgalian). Samogitian and Latgalian used to be considered dialects of Lithuanian and Latvian respectively.{{Citation needed|date=August 2022}}
  • There are also several extinct Baltic languages, including: Curonian,{{cite book |last=Pronk |first=Tijmen |date=2017 |title=USQUE AD RADICES Indo-European studies in honour of Birgit Anette Olsen: Curonian accentuation |url=https://www.academia.edu/35480576 |location=Copenhagen, Denmark |publisher=Museum Tusculanum Press |page=659 |isbn=9788763545761}}{{cite journal |last1=Vaba |first1=Lembit |date=July 2014 |title=Curonian linguistic elements in Livonian |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/286371765 |journal=Eesti ja Soome-Ugri Keeleteaduse Ajakiri |volume=5 |issue=1 |pages=173–191 |doi=10.12697/jeful.2014.5.1.09 |access-date=2024-02-18|doi-access=free }} Galindian, Old Prussian,{{cite journal |last1=Nomachi |first1=Motoki |date=2019 |title=Placing Kashubian in the Circum-Baltic (CB) area |url=https://www.journals.polon.uw.edu.pl/index.php/pf/article/view/470 |journal=Prace Filologiczne |volume=LXXIV |issue=2019 |pages=315–328 |doi=10.32798/pf.470 |access-date=2024-02-18|doi-access=free }} Selonian, Semigallian,{{cite web | last=Mažiulis | first=Vytautas J. | title=Baltic Languages | website=Encyclopedia Britannica | date=July 26, 1999 | url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Baltic-languages | access-date=February 18, 2024}} and Sudovian.{{cite journal |last1=Szatkowski |first1=Piotr |date=January 2022 |title=Language Practices in a Family of Prussian Language Revivalists: Conclusions Based on Short-Term Participant Observation |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/358448619 |journal=Adeptus |issue=2626 |pages=173 |doi=10.11649/a.2626 |access-date=2024-02-18|doi-access=free }}
  • Albanian ({{circa}} 7.5 million) has two major dialects, Tosk Albanian and Gheg Albanian. It is spoken in Albania and Kosovo, neighboring North Macedonia, Serbia, Italy, and Montenegro. It is also widely spoken in the Albanian diaspora.{{cite journal |last1=Çerpja |first1=Adelina |last2=Çepani |first2=Anila |date=December 2023 |title=Albanian Dialect Classifications |url=https://www.edicions.ub.edu/revistes/dialectologiaSP2023/documentos/1938.pdf |journal=Dialectologia |volume=11 |issue=2023 |pages=51–87 |doi=10.1344/dialectologia2023.2023.3 |access-date=8 March 2025}}
  • Armenian ({{circa}} 7 million) has two major forms, Western Armenian and Eastern Armenian. It is spoken in Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia (Samtskhe-Javakheti) and Abkhazia, also Russia, France, Italy, Turkey, Greece, and Cyprus. It is also widely spoken in the Armenian Diaspora. {{Citation needed|date=August 2022}}
  • There are six living Celtic languages, spoken in areas of northwestern Europe dubbed the "Celtic nations". All six are members of the Insular Celtic family, which in turn is divided into:
  • Brittonic family: Welsh (Wales, {{circa}} 462,000{{Cite web |title=Welsh {{!}} Ethnologue Free |url=https://www.ethnologue.com/language/cym/ |access-date=2023-12-23 |website=Ethnologue (Free All) |language=en}}), Cornish (Cornwall, {{circa}} 500{{Cite web |title=Cornish {{!}} Ethnologue Free |url=https://www.ethnologue.com/language/cor/ |access-date=2023-12-23 |website=Ethnologue (Free All) |language=en}}) and Breton (Brittany, {{circa}} 206,000{{Cite web |title=Breton {{!}} Ethnologue Free |url=https://www.ethnologue.com/language/bre/ |access-date=2023-12-23 |website=Ethnologue (Free All) |language=en}})
  • Goidelic family: Irish (Ireland, {{circa}} 1.7 million{{Cite web |title=Irish {{!}} Ethnologue Free |url=https://www.ethnologue.com/language/gle/ |access-date=2023-12-23 |website=Ethnologue (Free All) |language=en}}), Scottish Gaelic (Scotland, {{circa}} 57,400{{Cite web |title=Scottish Gaelic {{!}} Ethnologue Free |url=https://www.ethnologue.com/language/gla/ |access-date=2023-12-23 |website=Ethnologue (Free All) |language=en}}), and Manx (Isle of Man, 1,660{{Cite web |title=Manx {{!}} Ethnologue Free |url=https://www.ethnologue.com/language/glv/ |access-date=2023-12-23 |website=Ethnologue (Free All) |language=en}})

: Continental Celtic languages had previously been spoken across Europe from Iberia and Gaul to Asia Minor, but became extinct in the first millennium CE.{{Cite web |title=Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic |url=https://www.asnc.cam.ac.uk/spokenword/texts_cc.php |access-date=2023-12-23 |website=www.asnc.cam.ac.uk}}{{Cite web |date=2023-12-22 |title=Celtic languages {{!}} History, Features, Origin, Map, & Facts {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Celtic-languages |access-date=2023-12-23 |website=www.britannica.com |language=en}}

  • The Indo-Aryan languages have one major representative: Romani ({{circa}} 4.6 million speakers{{Citation |title=ROMANI IN EUROPE |vauthors=Zatreanu M, Halwachs DW |url=https://www.coe.int/t/dg4/education/roma/source/romanieurope_en.pdf |publisher=The Council of Europe}}), introduced in Europe during the late medieval period. Lacking a nation state, Romani is spoken as a minority language throughout Europe.
  • The Iranian languages in Europe are natively represented in the North Caucasus, notably with Ossetian ({{circa}} 600,000).{{Citation needed|date=August 2022}}

Non-Indo-European languages

= Turkic =

{{Main|Turkic languages}}

File:Turkic Languages distribution map.png

= Uralic =

{{Main|Uralic languages}}

File:Uralic languages ( ALL LANGUAGES ).png

The Uralic language family is native to northern Eurasia.

Finnic languages include Finnish ({{circa}} 5 million) and Estonian ({{circa}} 1 million), as well as smaller languages such as Kven ({{circa}} 8,000). Other languages of the Finno-Permic branch of the family include e.g. Mari (c. 400,000), and the Sami languages ({{circa}} 30,000).{{Cite web |date=2025-02-24 |title=Uralic languages {{!}} Finno-Ugric, Samoyedic, & Permic Groups {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Uralic-languages |access-date=2025-03-25 |website=www.britannica.com |language=en}}

The Ugric branch of the language family is represented in Europe by the Hungarian language ({{circa}} 13 million), historically introduced with the Hungarian conquest of the Carpathian Basin of the 9th century.{{Citation needed|date=August 2022}}

The Samoyedic Nenets language is spoken in Nenets Autonomous Okrug of Russia, located in the far northeastern corner of Europe (as delimited by the Ural Mountains).{{Citation needed|date=August 2022}}

= Semitic =

{{Main|Semitic languages}}

File:Non-Indo European nations in Europe.svg

  • Maltese ({{circa}} 500,000) is a Semitic language with Romance and Germanic influences, spoken in Malta.{{cite web |last=Alexander |first=Marie |title=2nd International Conference of Maltese Linguistics: Saturday, September 19 – Monday, September 21, 2009 |url=http://www.fb10.uni-bremen.de/maltese/abstracts.aspx |year=2009 |publisher=International Association of Maltese Linguistics |access-date=2 November 2009 |display-authors=etal |archive-date=23 June 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080623195959/http://www.fb10.uni-bremen.de/maltese/abstracts.aspx |url-status=dead }}{{cite journal |first=J. |last=Aquilina |title=Maltese as a Mixed Language |journal=Journal of Semitic Studies |year=1958 |volume=3 |number=1 |pages=58–79 |doi=10.1093/jss/3.1.58}}{{cite journal |title=The Structure of Maltese |first=Joseph |last=Aquilina |journal=Journal of the American Oriental Society |volume=80 |number=3 |date=July–September 1960 |pages=267–68 |doi=10.2307/596187|jstor=596187 }}{{cite journal |title=Europe's New Arabic Connection |first1=Louis |last1=Werner |first2=Alan |last2=Calleja |url=http://www.saudiaramcoworld.com/issue/200406/europe.s.new.arabic.connection.htm |journal=Saudi Aramco World |date=November–December 2004 |access-date=2016-02-05 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120929195459/http://www.saudiaramcoworld.com/issue/200406/europe.s.new.arabic.connection.htm |archive-date=2012-09-29 |url-status=dead }} It is based on Sicilian Arabic, with influences from Sicilian, Italian, French and, more recently, English. It is the only Semitic language whose standard form is written in Latin script. It is also the second smallest official language of the EU in terms of speakers (after Irish), and the only official Semitic language within the EU.{{Citation needed|date=August 2022}}
  • Cypriot Maronite Arabic (also known as Cypriot Arabic) is a variety of Arabic spoken by Maronites in Cyprus. Most speakers live in Nicosia, but others are in the communities of Kormakiti and Lemesos. Brought to the island by Maronites fleeing Lebanon over 700 years ago, this variety of Arabic has been influenced by Greek in both phonology and vocabulary, while retaining certain unusually archaic features in other respects.
  • Eastern Aramaic, a Semitic language is spoken by Assyrian communities in the Caucasus and southern Russia who fled the Assyrian Genocide during World War I, and also by Assyrian communities in the Assyrian diaspora in other parts of Europe.{{Cite web |title=Assyrian Neo-Aramaic {{!}} Ethnologue Free |url=https://www.ethnologue.com/language/aii/ |access-date=2023-12-22 |website=Ethnologue (Free All) |language=en}}

= Others =

=Sign languages=

{{Main|List of sign languages#Europe}}

Several dozen manual languages exist across Europe, with the most widespread sign language family being the Francosign languages, with its languages found in countries from Iberia to the Balkans and the Baltics. Accurate historical information of sign and tactile languages is difficult to come by, with folk histories noting the existence signing communities across Europe hundreds of years ago. British Sign Language (BSL) and French Sign Language (LSF) are probably the oldest confirmed, continuously used sign languages. Alongside German Sign Language (DGS) according to Ethnologue, these three have the most numbers of signers, though very few institutions take appropriate statistics on contemporary signing populations, making legitimate data hard to find.{{Citation needed|date=August 2022}}

Notably, few European sign languages have overt connections with the local majority/oral languages, aside from standard language contact and borrowing, meaning grammatically the sign languages and the oral languages of Europe are quite distinct from one another. Due to (visual/aural) modality differences, most sign languages are named for the larger ethnic nation in which they are spoken, plus the words "sign language", rendering what is spoken across much of France, Wallonia and Romandy as French Sign Language or LSF for: langue des signes française.{{Cite web |title=La Langue des signes française (LSF) {{!}} Fondation pour l'audition |url=https://www.fondationpourlaudition.org/la-langue-des-signes-francaise-569 |access-date=2023-12-22 |website=www.fondationpourlaudition.org}}

Recognition of non-oral languages varies widely from region to region.{{Cite book|doi=10.1002/9781405198431.wbeal1417|chapter=Language Policy for Sign Languages|title=The Encyclopedia of Applied Linguistics|year=2014|last1=Reagan|first1=Timothy|pages=1–6|isbn=9781405194730}} Some countries afford legal recognition, even to official on a state level, whereas others continue to be actively suppressed.{{cite journal |last1=Murray |first1=Joseph J. |title=Linguistic Human Rights Discourse in Deaf Community Activism |journal=Sign Language Studies |date=2015 |volume=15 |issue=4 |pages=379–410 |pmid=26190995 |url= |doi=10.1353/sls.2015.0012 |jstor=26190995 |pmc=4490244 }}

Though "there is a widespread belief—among both Deaf people and sign language linguists—that there are sign language families,"{{Cite journal |last=Reagan |first=Timothy |date=2021 |title=Historical Linguistics and the Case for Sign Language Families |url=https://muse.jhu.edu/article/799807 |journal=Sign Language Studies |language=en |volume=21 |issue=4 |pages=427–454 |doi=10.1353/sls.2021.0006 |s2cid=236778280 |issn=1533-6263|url-access=subscription }} the actual relationship between sign languages is difficult to ascertain. Concepts and methods used in historical linguistics to describe language families for written and spoken languages are not easily mapped onto signed languages.{{Cite journal |last=Power |first=Justin M. |date=2022 |title=Historical Linguistics of Sign Languages: Progress and Problems |journal=Frontiers in Psychology |volume=13 |doi=10.3389/fpsyg.2022.818753 |pmid=35356353 |issn=1664-1078 |doi-access=free |pmc=8959496 }} Some of the current understandings of sign language relationships, however, provide some reasonable estimates about potential sign language families:

History of standardization

{{further|Ethnic groups in Europe#History|Vernacular|De vulgari eloquentia}}

= Language and identity, standardization processes =

In the Middle Ages the two most important defining elements of Europe were Christianitas and Latinitas.{{Cite web |last=Mark |first=Joshua |date=28 June 2019 |title=Religion in the Middle Ages |url=https://www.worldhistory.org/article/1411/religion-in-the-middle-ages/ |access-date=15 December 2023 |website=World History Encyclopedia}}

The earliest dictionaries were glossaries: more or less structured lists of lexical pairs (in alphabetical order or according to conceptual fields). The Latin-German (Latin-Bavarian) Abrogans was among the first. A new wave of lexicography can be seen from the late 15th century onwards (after the introduction of the printing press, with the growing interest in standardisation of languages).{{Citation needed|date=August 2022}}

The concept of the nation state began to emerge in the early modern period. Nations adopted particular dialects as their national language. This, together with improved communications, led to official efforts to standardise the national language, and a number of language academies were established: 1582 Accademia della Crusca in Florence, 1617 Fruchtbringende Gesellschaft in Weimar, 1635 Académie française in Paris, 1713 Real Academia Española in Madrid. Language became increasingly linked to nation as opposed to culture, and was also used to promote religious and ethnic identity: e.g. different Bible translations in the same language for Catholics and Protestants.{{Citation needed|date=August 2022}}

The first languages whose standardisation was promoted included Italian (questione della lingua: Modern Tuscan/Florentine vs. Old Tuscan/Florentine vs. Venetian → Modern Florentine + archaic Tuscan + Upper Italian), French (the standard is based on Parisian), English (the standard is based on the London dialect) and (High) German (based on the dialects of the chancellery of Meissen in Saxony, Middle German, and the chancellery of Prague in Bohemia ("Common German")). But several other nations also began to develop a standard variety in the 16th century.{{Citation needed|date=August 2022}}

= Lingua franca =

Europe has had a number of languages that were considered linguae francae over some ranges for some periods according to some historians. Typically in the rise of a national language the new language becomes a lingua franca to peoples in the range of the future nation until the consolidation and unification phases. If the nation becomes internationally influential, its language may become a lingua franca among nations that speak their own national languages. Europe has had no lingua franca ranging over its entire territory spoken by all or most of its populations during any historical period. Some linguae francae of past and present over some of its regions for some of its populations are:

  • Classical Greek and then Koine Greek in the Mediterranean Basin from the Athenian Empire to the Eastern Roman Empire, being replaced by Modern Greek.
  • Koine Greek and Modern Greek, in the Eastern Roman or Byzantine Empire and other parts of the Balkans south of the Jireček Line.{{cite journal |title=Review [untitled] of Ariadna Camariano-Cioran, Les Academies Princieres de Bucarest et de Jassy et leur Professeurs |journal=Church History |volume=45 |number=1 |date = March 1976|pages=115–116 |quote=...Greek, the lingua franca of commerce and religion, provided a cultural unity to the Balkans...Greek penetrated Moldavian and Wallachian territories as early as the fourteenth century.... The heavy influence of Greek culture upon the intellectual and academic life of Bucharest and Jassy was longer termed than historians once believed. |first=James Steve |last=Counelis |doi=10.2307/3164593|jstor=3164593 |s2cid=162293323 }}
  • Vulgar Latin and Late Latin among the uneducated and educated populations respectively of the Roman Empire and the states that followed it in the same range no later than 900 AD; Medieval Latin and Renaissance Latin among the educated populations of western, northern, central and part of eastern Europe until the rise of the national languages in that range, beginning with the first language academy in Italy in 1582/83; Neo-Latin written only in scholarly and scientific contexts by a small minority of the educated population at scattered locations over all of Europe; ecclesiastical Latin, in spoken and written contexts of liturgy and church administration only, over the range of the Roman Catholic Church.{{Citation needed|date=August 2022}}
  • Old Occitan in central and southern France, north-western Italy and the main territories of the crown of Aragon (Catalonia, Valencia, the Balearic Islands and Aragon).{{Cite web |title=A troubadour literary koiné? |url=https://www.trob-eu.net/en/a-troubadour-literary-koine.html}}
  • Lingua Franca or Sabir, the original of the name, an Italian and Catalan-based pidgin language of mixed origins used by maritime commercial interests around the Mediterranean in the Middle Ages and early Modern Age.{{cite book |title=Lingua Franca in the Mediterranean |first=John E. |last=Wansbrough |chapter=Chapter 3: Lingua Franca |year=1996 |publisher=Routledge}}
  • Old French in continental western European countries and in the Crusader states.{{cite book |title=Language wars and linguistic politics |first=Louis Jean |last=Calvet |location=Oxford [England]; New York |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=1998 |pages=175–76}}
  • Czech, mainly during the reign of Holy Roman Emperor Charles IV (14th century) but also during other periods of Bohemian control over the Holy Roman Empire.{{Citation needed|date=August 2022}}
  • Middle Low German, around the 14th–16th century, during the heyday of the Hanseatic League, mainly in Northeastern Europe across the Baltic Sea.
  • Spanish as Castilian in Spain and New Spain from the times of the Catholic Monarchs and Columbus, c. 1492; that is, after the Reconquista, until established as a national language in the times of Louis XIV, c. 1648; subsequently multinational in all nations in or formerly in the Spanish Empire.{{cite book |page=[https://archive.org/details/decolonizinginte00jone/page/n55 98] |title=Decolonizing international relations |url=https://archive.org/details/decolonizinginte00jone |url-access=limited |first=Branwen Gruffydd |last=Jones |location=Lanham, MD|publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |year=2006}}
  • Polish, due to the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth (16th–18th centuries).{{Citation needed|date=August 2022}}
  • Italian due to the Renaissance, the opera, the Italian Empire, the fashion industry and the influence of the Roman Catholic church.{{cite journal |last=Kahane |first=Henry |date=September 1986 |title=A Typology of the Prestige Language |journal=Language |volume=62 |issue=3 |pages=495–508 |doi=10.2307/415474 |jstor=415474}}
  • French from the golden age under Cardinal Richelieu and Louis XIV c. 1648; i.e., after the Thirty Years' War, in France and the French colonial empire, until established as the national language during the French Revolution of 1789 and subsequently multinational in all nations in or formerly in the various French Empires.
  • German in Northern, Central, and Eastern Europe.{{cite journal |first1=Jeroen |last1=Darquennes |first2=Peter |last2=Nelde |title=German as a Lingua Franca |journal=Annual Review of Applied Linguistics |volume=26 |pages=61–77 |year=2006 |doi=10.1017/s0267190506000043|doi-broken-date=18 December 2024 |s2cid=61449212 }}
  • English in Great Britain until its consolidation as a national language in the Renaissance and the rise of Modern English; subsequently internationally under the various states in or formerly in the British Empire; globally since the victories of the predominantly English speaking countries (United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and others) and their allies in the two world wars ending in 1918 (World War I) and 1945 (World War II) and the subsequent rise of the United States as a superpower and major cultural influence.{{Citation needed|date=August 2022}}
  • Russian in the former Soviet Union and Russian Empire including Northern and Central Asia.{{Citation needed|date=August 2022}}

= Linguistic minorities =

Historical attitudes towards linguistic diversity are illustrated by two French laws: the Ordonnance de Villers-Cotterêts (1539), which said that every document in France should be written in French (neither in Latin nor in Occitan) and the Loi Toubon (1994), which aimed to eliminate anglicisms from official documents. States and populations within a state have often resorted to war to settle their differences. There have been attempts to prevent such hostilities: two such initiatives were promoted by the Council of Europe, founded in 1949, which affirms the right of minority language speakers to use their language fully and freely.{{cite web|title=European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages: Strasbourg, 5.XI.1992|url=http://conventions.coe.int/treaty/en/Treaties/Html/148.htm|publisher=Council of Europe|year=1992|access-date=4 November 2009|archive-date=26 February 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110226052008/http://conventions.coe.int/Treaty/EN/Treaties/HTML/148.htm|url-status=dead}} The Council of Europe is committed to protecting linguistic diversity. Currently all European countries except France, Andorra and Turkey have signed the Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities, while Greece, Iceland and Luxembourg have signed it, but have not ratified it; this framework entered into force in 1998. Another European treaty, the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages, was adopted in 1992 under the auspices of the Council of Europe: it entered into force in 1998, and while it is legally binding for 24 countries, France, Iceland, Italy, North Macedonia, Moldova and Russia have chosen to sign without ratifying the convention.{{Cite book |last1=Protsyk |first1=Oleh |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fMFE-OYR3dkC&dq=%22European+Charter+for+Regional+or+Minority%22+%221998%22+%22russia%22&pg=PA42 |title=Managing Ethnic Diversity in Russia |last2=Harzl |first2=Benedikt |date=2013-05-07 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-136-26774-1 |pages=42 |language=en}}{{Cite book |last=Assembly |first=Council of Europe: Parliamentary |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wKonXLgCTLQC&dq=%22European+Charter+for+Regional+or+Minority%22+%221998%22+%22moldova%22&pg=PA235 |title=Documents: working papers, 2006 ordinary session (first part), 23 -27 January 2006, Vol. 1: Documents 10711, 10712, 10715-10769 |date=2006-11-08 |publisher=Council of Europe |isbn=978-92-871-5932-8 |pages=235 |language=en}}

= Scripts =

[[File:Scripts of European national languages.png|thumb|320px|Alphabets used in European national languages:

{{legend|#008000|Greek}}

{{legend|#008080|Greek & Latin}}

{{legend|#000080|Latin}}

{{legend|#800080|Latin & Cyrillic}}

{{legend|#FF0000|Cyrillic}}

{{legend|#FF6600|Georgian}}

{{legend|#FFCC00|Armenian}}]]

The main scripts used in Europe today are the Latin and Cyrillic.{{Cite web |last=Dimitrov |first=Bogoya |date=2023-05-19 |title=Book Exhibition Dedicated to the Day of the Cyrillic Alphabet |url=https://blogs.eui.eu/library/cyrillic-alphabet/ |access-date=2023-12-16 |website=The EUI Library Blog |language=en-US}}

The Greek alphabet was derived from the Phoenician alphabet, and Latin was derived from the Greek via the Old Italic alphabet. In the Early Middle Ages, Ogham was used in Ireland and runes (derived from Old Italic script) in Scandinavia. Both were replaced in general use by the Latin alphabet by the Late Middle Ages. The Cyrillic script was derived from the Greek with the first texts appearing around 940 AD.{{Citation needed|date=August 2022}}

{{See also|Antiqua–Fraktur dispute}}

Around 1900 there were mainly two typeface variants of the Latin alphabet used in Europe: Antiqua and Fraktur. Fraktur was used most for German, Estonian, Latvian, Norwegian and Danish whereas Antiqua was used for Italian, Spanish, French, Polish, Portuguese, English, Romanian, Swedish and Finnish. The Fraktur variant was banned by Hitler in 1941, having been described as "Schwabacher Jewish letters".[http://www.ligaturix.de/bormann.htm Facsimile of Bormann's Memorandum (in German)]

The memorandum itself is typed in Antiqua, but the NSDAP letterhead is printed in Fraktur.
"For general attention, on behalf of the Führer, I make the following announcement:
It is wrong to regard or to describe the so‑called Gothic script as a German script. In reality, the so‑called Gothic script consists of Schwabach Jew letters. Just as they later took control of the newspapers, upon the introduction of printing the Jews residing in Germany took control of the printing presses and thus in Germany the Schwabach Jew letters were forcefully introduced.
Today the Führer, talking with Herr Reichsleiter Amann and Herr Book Publisher Adolf Müller, has decided that in the future the Antiqua script is to be described as normal script. All printed materials are to be gradually converted to this normal script. As soon as is feasible in terms of textbooks, only the normal script will be taught in village and state schools.
The use of the Schwabach Jew letters by officials will in future cease; appointment certifications for functionaries, street signs, and so forth will in future be produced only in normal script.
On behalf of the Führer, Herr Reichsleiter Amann will in future convert those newspapers and periodicals that already have foreign distribution, or whose foreign distribution is desired, to normal script". Other scripts have historically been in use in Europe, including Phoenician, from which modern Latin letters descend, Ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs on Egyptian artefacts traded during Antiquity, various runic systems used in Northern Europe preceding Christianisation, and Arabic during the era of the Ottoman Empire.{{Citation needed|date=August 2022}}

Hungarian rovás was used by the Hungarian people in the early Middle Ages, but it was gradually replaced with the Latin-based Hungarian alphabet when Hungary became a kingdom, though it was revived in the 20th century and has certain marginal, but growing area of usage since then.{{Cite web |last=Gleichgewicht |first=Daniel |date=2020-04-30 |title=New illiberalism and the old Hungarian alphabet |url=https://neweasterneurope.eu/2020/04/30/new-illiberalism-and-the-old-hungarian-alphabet/ |access-date=2024-05-16 |website=New Eastern Europe |language=en-GB}}

= European Union =

{{main|Languages of the European Union}}

The European Union (as of 2021) had 27 member states accounting for a population of 447 million, or about 60% of the population of Europe.{{cite web | url = https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/databrowser/view/TPS00001/bookmark/table?lang=en&bookmarkId=6ef61f16-dadc-42b1-a6ce-3ddfda4727e8 | title = Population on 1 January | website = Eurostat | access-date = 27 March 2024}}

The European Union has designated by agreement with the member states 24 languages as "official and working": Bulgarian, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Estonian, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hungarian, Irish, Italian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Maltese, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Slovak, Slovenian, Spanish and Swedish.{{cite web|title=Languages Policy: Linguistic diversity: Official languages of the EU|url=http://ec.europa.eu/languages/policy/linguistic-diversity/official-languages-eu_en.htm|publisher=European Commission, European Union|date=4 June 2009|access-date= 9 August 2015}} This designation provides member states with two "entitlements": the member state may communicate with the EU in any of the designated languages, and view "EU regulations and other legislative documents" in that language.{{cite web|title=Languages of Europe: Official EU languages |url=http://ec.europa.eu/education/languages/languages-of-europe/doc135_en.htm |publisher=European Commission, European Union |year=2009 |access-date=5 November 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090202112407/http://ec.europa.eu/education/languages/languages-of-europe/doc135_en.htm |archive-date=2 February 2009 }}

The European Union and the Council of Europe have been collaborating in education of member populations in languages for "the promotion of plurilingualism" among EU member states.{{cite web|title=Common European Framework of Reference for Languages: Learning, Teaching, Assessment (CEFR) |url=http://www.coe.int/T/DG4/Linguistic/CADRE_EN.asp |publisher=Council of Europe |access-date=5 November 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091030205032/http://www.coe.int/t/dg4/linguistic/CADRE_EN.asp |archive-date=30 October 2009 }} The joint document, "Common European Framework of Reference for Languages: Learning, Teaching, Assessment (CEFR)", is an educational standard defining "the competencies necessary for communication" and related knowledge for the benefit of educators in setting up educational programs.

In a 2005 independent survey requested by the EU's Directorate-General for Education and Culture regarding the extent to which major European languages were spoken in member states. The results were published in a 2006 document, "Europeans and Their Languages", or "Eurobarometer 243". In this study, statistically relevant{{clarify|date=December 2019}}{{Fix|text=Do you mean "significant"?}} samples of the population in each country were asked to fill out a survey form concerning the languages that they spoke with sufficient competency "to be able to have a conversation".{{cite web|title=Europeans and Their Languages|url=http://ec.europa.eu/public_opinion/archives/ebs/ebs_243_en.pdf|publisher=European Commission|year=2006|access-date=5 November 2009|page=8}}

List of languages

{{Further|List of European languages by number of speakers|List of endangered languages in Europe|List of extinct languages of Europe}}

The following is a table of European languages. The number of speakers as a first or second language (L1 and L2 speakers) listed are speakers in Europe only;{{refn|"Europe" is taken as a geographical term, defined by the conventional Europe-Asia boundary along the Caucasus and the Urals. Estimates for populations geographically in Europe are given for transcontinental countries.|group=nb}} see list of languages by number of native speakers and list of languages by total number of speakers for global estimates on numbers of speakers.{{Citation needed|date=August 2022}}

The list is intended to include any language variety with an ISO 639 code. However, it omits sign languages. Because the ISO-639-2 and ISO-639-3 codes have different definitions, this means that some communities of speakers may be listed more than once. For instance, speakers of Bavarian are listed both under "Bavarian" (ISO-639-3 code bar) as well as under "German" (ISO-639-2 code de).{{Cite web |title=Relationships to other parts of ISO 639 {{!}} ISO 639-3 |url=https://iso639-3.sil.org/about/relationships |access-date=2023-12-18 |website=iso639-3.sil.org}}

class="wikitable sortable"
rowspan=2|Name

! rowspan=2|ISO-
639

! rowspan=2|Classification

! colspan=2|Speakers in Europe

! colspan=2|Official status

data-sort-type="number" style="width:90pt;"|Native

!data-sort-type="number"|Total

!National{{refn|Sovereign states, defined as United Nations member states and observer states. 'Recognised minority language' status is not included.|group=nb}}

!Regional

AbazaabqNorthwest Caucasian, Abazgi49,800{{e18|abq|Abaza}}Karachay-Cherkessia (Russia)
AdygheadyNorthwest Caucasian, Circassian117,500{{e18|ady|Adyghe }}Adygea (Russia)
AghulagxNortheast Caucasian, Lezgic29,300{{e18|agx|Aghul}}Dagestan (Russia)
AkhvakhakvNortheast Caucasian, Avar–Andic210{{e18|akv|Akhvakh}}
Albanian (Shqip)
Arbëresh
Arvanitika
sqIndo-European{{sort|5,367,000|5,367,000{{e18|sqi|Albanian}}
5,877,100{{cite web|url=https://www.ethnologue.com/language/sqi|title=Albanian|website=Ethnologue|access-date=12 December 2018}} Population total of all languages of the Albanian macrolanguage. (Balkans)}}
Albania, Kosovo{{refn|The Republic of Kosovo is a partially recognized state (recognized by 111 out of 193 UN member states as of 2017).|group=nb|name=Kosovo}}, North MacedoniaItaly, Arbëresh dialect: Sicily, Calabria,{{cite web |url=http://www.consiglioregionale.calabria.it/upload/testicoordinati/LR%2015-2003%28TC%29.doc |title=Norme per la tutela e la valorizzazione della lingua e del patrimonio culturale delle minoranze linguistiche e storiche di Calabria |access-date=2020-06-25 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090806193843/http://www.consiglioregionale.calabria.it/upload/testicoordinati/LR%2015-2003%28TC%29.doc |archive-date=2009-08-06 |url-status=dead }} Apulia, Molise, Basilicata, Abruzzo, Campania
Montenegro (Ulcinj, Tuzi)
AndianiNortheast Caucasian, Avar–Andic5,800{{e18|ani|Andi}}
AragoneseanIndo-European, Romance, Western, West Iberian25,000https://zaguan.unizar.es/record/60448 Report about Census of population 2011 of Aragonese Sociolinguistics Seminar and University of Zaragoza55,000{{cite web|url=http://historico.aragondigital.es/noticia.asp?notid=126286|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150101002219/http://www.aragondigital.es/noticia.asp?notid=126286|url-status=dead|title=Más de 50.000 personas hablan aragonés|archive-date=1 January 2015|website=Aragón Digital}}Northern Aragon (Spain){{refn|Recognized and protected, but not official.|group=nb|name=Not Official}}
ArchiacqNortheast Caucasian, Lezgic970{{e18|acq|Archi}}
AromanianrupIndo-European, Romance, Eastern114,000{{e18|rup|Aromanian }}North Macedonia (Kruševo)
Asturian (Astur-Leonese)astIndo-European, Romance, Western, West Iberian351,791[https://www.ehu.eus/documents/1457190/1547454/Avance+III+Encuesta+Sociolling%C3%BC%C3%ADstica+Asturias.pdf/aba19c6f-4dab-470c-8a33-157248373072 III Sociolinguistic Study of Asturias (2017)]. Euskobarometro.641,502Asturias{{refn|Recognized and protected, but not official.|group=nb|name=Not Official}}
AvaravNortheast Caucasian, Avar–Andic760,000Dagestan (Russia)
AzerbaijaniazTurkic, Oghuz500,000c. 130,000 in Dagestan. In addition, there are about 0.5 million speakers in immigrant communities in Russia, see #Immigrant communities. {{e18|aze|Azerbaijani }}AzerbaijanDagestan (Russia)
BagvalalkvaNortheast Caucasian, Avar–Andic1,500{{e18|kva|Bagvalal}}
BashkirbaTurkic, Kipchak1,221,000{{e18|bak|Bashkort }}Bashkortostan (Russia)
BasqueeuBasque750,000{{in lang|fr}} [http://www.mintzaira.fr/fileadmin/documents/Aktualitateak/015_VI_ENQUETE_PB__Fr.pdf VI° Enquête Sociolinguistique en Euskal herria (Communauté Autonome d'Euskadi, Navarre et Pays Basque Nord)] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180821114111/http://www.mintzaira.fr/fileadmin/documents/Aktualitateak/015_VI_ENQUETE_PB__Fr.pdf |date=21 August 2018 }} (2016).Basque Country: Basque Autonomous Community, Navarre (Spain), French Basque Country (France){{refn|Recognized and protected, but not official.|group=nb|name=Not Official}}
BavarianbarIndo-European, Germanic, West, High German, Upper, Bavarian14,000,000German dialect, {{e18|bar|Bavarian}}Austria (as German)South Tyrol
BelarusianbeIndo-European, Slavic, East3,300,000{{e18|bel|Belarusian }}Belarus
BezhtakapNortheast Caucasian, Tsezic6,800{{e18|kap|Bezhta}}
BosnianbsIndo-European, Slavic, South, Western, Serbo-Croatian2,500,000{{e18|bos|Bosnian}}Bosnia and HerzegovinaKosovo{{refn|The Republic of Kosovo is a partially recognized state (recognized by 111 out of 193 UN member states as of 2017).|group=nb|name=Kosovo}}, Montenegro
BotlikhbphNortheast Caucasian, Avar–Andic210{{e18|bph|Botlikh}}
BretonbrIndo-European, Celtic, Brittonic206,000{{e18|bre|Breton}}None, de facto status in Brittany (France)
BulgarianbgIndo-European, Slavic, South, Eastern7,800,000{{e18|bul|Bulgarian }}BulgariaMount Athos (Greece)
CatalancaIndo-European, Romance, Western, Occitano-Romance4,000,000{{cite web|url=http://www.ethnologue.com/18/language/cat/|title=Catalan|date=19 November 2019}}10,000,000{{cite web|url=http://blogs.iec.cat/cruscat/publicacions/informe/|title=Informe sobre la Situació de la Llengua Catalana | Xarxa CRUSCAT. Coneixements, usos i representacions del català.|website=blogs.iec.cat}}AndorraBalearic Islands (Spain), Catalonia (Spain), Valencian Community (Spain), easternmost Aragon (Spain){{refn|Recognized and protected, but not official.|group=nb|name=Not Official}}, Pyrénées-Orientales (France){{refn|Recognized and protected, but not official.|group=nb|name=Not Official}}, Alghero (Italy)
ChamalalcjiNortheast Caucasian, Avar–Andic500{{e18|cji|Chamalal}}
ChechenceNortheast Caucasian, Nakh1,400,000{{e18|che|Chechen }}Chechnya & Dagestan (Russia)
ChuvashcvTurkic, Oghur1,100,000{{e18|chv|Chuvash }}Chuvashia (Russia)
CimbriancimIndo-European, Germanic, West, High German, Upper, Bavarian400German dialect, {{e18|cim|Cimbrian}}
CornishkwIndo-European, Celtic, Brittonic563{{cite web |title=Main language (detailed) |url=https://www.ons.gov.uk/datasets/TS024/editions/2021/versions/3 |website=Office for National Statistics |access-date=31 July 2023}} (UK 2021 Census)Cornwall (United Kingdom){{refn|Recognized and protected, but not official.|group=nb|name=Not Official}}
CorsicancoIndo-European, Romance, Italo-Dalmatian30,000{{e18|cos|Corsican }}125,000Corsica (France), Sardinia (Italy)
Crimean TatarcrhTurkic, Kipchak480,000{{e18|crh|Crimean Tatar }}Crimea (Ukraine)
CroatianhrIndo-European, Slavic, South, Western, Serbo-Croatian5,600,000{{e18|hrv|Croatian }}Bosnia and Herzegovina, CroatiaBurgenland (Austria), Vojvodina (Serbia)
CzechcsIndo-European, Slavic, West, Czech–Slovak10,600,000{{e18|ces|Czech }}Czech Republic
DanishdaIndo-European, Germanic, North5,500,000{{e18|dan|Danish }}DenmarkFaroe Islands (Denmark), Schleswig-Holstein (Germany)recognized as official language in Nordfriesland, Schleswig-Flensburg, Flensburg and Rendsburg-Eckernförde ([http://www.lexsoft.de/cgi-bin/lexsoft/justizportal_nrw.cgi?xid=148815,381 § 82b LVwG])
DargwadarNortheast Caucasian, Dargin490,000{{e18|dar|Dargwa}}Dagestan (Russia)
DutchnlIndo-European, Germanic, West, Low Franconian22,000,000{{e18|nld|Dutch }}24,000,000{{cite web |url=http://taalunieversum.org/inhoud/feiten-en-cijfers |title=Feiten en cijfers - Wat iedereen zou moeten weten over het Nederlands |publisher=Rijksoverheid |access-date=27 December 2017 |language=nl |date=11 January 2016 |archive-date=21 March 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210321083122/http://taalunieversum.org/inhoud/feiten-en-cijfers |url-status=bot: unknown }}Belgium, Netherlands
ElfdalianovdIndo-European, Germanic, North2000
EmilianeglIndo-European, Romance, Western, Gallo-Italic|
EnglishenIndo-European, Germanic, West, Anglo-Frisian, Anglic63,000,000{{e18|eng|English }}260,000,000[http://ec.europa.eu/public_opinion/archives/ebs/ebs_386_en.pdf Europeans and their Languages] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160106183351/http://ec.europa.eu/public_opinion/archives/ebs/ebs_386_en.pdf |date=6 January 2016 }}, [http://ec.europa.eu/public_opinion/archives/ebs/ebs_386_anx_en.pdf Data for EU27] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130429224902/http://ec.europa.eu/public_opinion/archives/ebs/ebs_386_anx_en.pdf |date=29 April 2013 }}, published in 2012.Ireland, Malta, United Kingdom
ErzyamyvUralic, Finno-Ugric, Mordvinic120,000{{e18|myv|Erzya}}Mordovia (Russia)
EstonianetUralic, Finno-Ugric, Finnic1,165,400{{e18|est|Estonian }}Estonia
ExtremaduranextIndo-European, Romance, Western, West Iberian200,000{{e18|ext|Extremaduran}}
FalafaxIndo-European, Romance, Western, West Iberian11,000{{e18|fax|Fala}}
FaroesefoIndo-European, Germanic, North66,150{{e18|fao|Faroese }}Faroe Islands (Denmark)
FinnishfiUralic, Finno-Ugric, Finnic5,400,000{{e18|fin|Finnish }}FinlandSweden, Norway, Republic of Karelia (Russia)
Franco-Provençal (Arpitan)frpIndo-European, Romance, Western, Gallo-Romance140,000{{e18|frp|Franco-Provençal}}Aosta Valley (Italy)
FrenchfrIndo-European, Romance, Western, Gallo-Romance, Oïl81,000,000{{e18|fra|French }}210,000,000Belgium, France, Luxembourg, Monaco, Switzerland, JerseyAosta Valley{{cite book|title=Le Statut spécial de la Vallée d'Aoste, Article 38, Title VI |publisher=Region Vallée d'Aoste |url=http://www.regione.vda.it/amministrazione/autonomia/statutospeciale/titolo6_f.asp |access-date=2 May 2014 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111104223214/http://www.regione.vda.it/amministrazione/autonomia/statutospeciale/titolo6_f.asp |archive-date= 4 November 2011 }} (Italy)
Frisianfry
frr
stq
Indo-European, Germanic, West, Anglo-Frisian470,000{{e18|fry|Frisian}}Friesland (Netherlands), Schleswig-Holstein (Germany)recognized as official language in the Nordfriesland district and in Helgoland

([http://www.lexsoft.de/cgi-bin/lexsoft/justizportal_nrw.cgi?xid=148815,381 § 82b LVwG]).

FriulanfurIndo-European, Romance, Western, Rhaeto-Romance600,000e18|fur|FriulanFriuli (Italy)
GagauzgagTurkic, Oghuz140,000{{e18|gag|Gagauz}}Gagauzia (Moldova)
GalicianglIndo-European, Romance, Western, West Iberian2,400,000{{e18|glg|Galician }}Galicia (Spain), Eo-Navia (Asturias){{refn|Recognized and protected, but not official.|group=nb|name=Not Official}}, Bierzo (Province of León){{refn|Recognized and protected, but not official.|group=nb|name=Not Official}} and Western Sanabria (Province of Zamora){{refn|Recognized and protected, but not official.|group=nb|name=Not Official}}
GermandeIndo-European, Germanic, West, High German97,000,000

includes:

bar Bavarian,

cim Cimbrian,

ksh Kölsch,

sli Lower Silesian,

vmf Mainfränkisch,

pfl Palatinate German,

swg Swabian German,

gsw Swiss German,

sxu Upper Saxon,

wae Walser German,

wep Westphalian,

wym Wymysorys,

yec Yenish,

yid Yiddish;

see German dialects.

170,000,000Austria, Belgium, Germany, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, SwitzerlandSouth Tyrol,[http://www.regione.taa.it/normativa/statuto_speciale.pdf Statuto Speciale Per Il Trentino-Alto Adige] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181126033052/http://www.regione.taa.it/normativa/statuto_speciale.pdf |date=26 November 2018 }} (1972), Art. 99–101. Friuli-Venezia Giulia{{cite web| url = https://www.regione.fvg.it/rafvg/cms/RAFVG/cultura-sport/patrimonio-culturale/comunita-linguistiche/FOGLIA7/| title = Official website of the Autonomous Region of Friuli-Venezia Giulia}} (Italy)
GodoberiginNortheast Caucasian, Avar–Andic130{{e18|gdo|Godoberi}}
GreekelIndo-European, Hellenic13,500,00011 million in Greece, out of 13.4 million in total. {{e18|ell|Greek }}Cyprus, GreeceAlbania (Finiq, Dropull)
HinuqginNortheast Caucasian, Tsezic350{{e18|gin|Hinuq}}
HungarianhuUralic, Finno-Ugric, Ugric13,000,000{{e18|hun|Hungarian }}HungaryBurgenland (Austria), Vojvodina (Serbia), Romania, Slovakia, Subcarpathia (Ukraine), Prekmurje, (Slovenia)
HunzibbphNortheast Caucasian, Tsezic1,400{{e18|huz|Hunzib}}
IcelandicisIndo-European, Germanic, North330,000{{e18|isl|Icelandic }}Iceland
IngrianizhUralic, Finno-Ugric, Finnic120{{e18|izh|Ingrian }}
IngushinhNortheast Caucasian, Nakh300,000{{e18|inh|Ingush }}Ingushetia (Russia)
IrishgaIndo-European, Celtic, Goidelic240,000{{e18|gle|Irish }}2,000,000IrelandNorthern Ireland (United Kingdom)
IstriotistIndo-European, Romance900{{e18|ist|Istriot }}
Istro-RomanianruoIndo-European, Romance, Eastern1,100{{e18|ruo|Istro-Romanian }}
ItalianitIndo-European, Romance, Italo-Dalmatian65,000,000{{e18|ita|Italian }}82,000,000Italy, San Marino, Switzerland, Vatican CityIstria County (Croatia), Slovenian Istria (Slovenia)
Judeo-ItalianitkIndo-European, Romance, Italo-Dalmatian250{{e18|itk|Judeo-Italian }}
Judaeo-Spanish (Ladino)ladIndo-European, Romance, Western, West Iberian320,000{{e18|lad|Judaeo-Spanish}}fewSIL Ethnologue:

"Not the dominant language for most. Formerly the main language of Sephardic Jewry. Used in literary and music contexts."

ca. 100k speakers in total, most of them in Israel, small communities in the Balkans, Greece, Turkey and in Spain.

Bosnia and Herzegovina{{refn|Recognized and protected, but not official.|group=nb|name=Not Official}}, France{{refn|Recognized and protected, but not official.|group=nb|name=Not Official}}
KabardiankbdNorthwest Caucasian, Circassian530,000{{e18|kbd|Kabardian }}Kabardino-Balkaria & Karachay-Cherkessia (Russia)
KaitagxdqNortheast Caucasian, Dargin30,000{{e18|xdq|Kaitag}}
KalmykxalMongolic80,500{{e18|xal|Oirat}}Kalmykia (Russia)
KaratakptNortheast Caucasian, Avar–Andic260{{e18|kpt|Karata}}
KareliankrlUralic, Finno-Ugric, Finnic36,000{{e18|krl|Karelian}}Republic of Karelia (Russia)
Karachay-BalkarkrcTurkic, Kipchak300,000{{e18|krc|Karachay-Balkar}}Kabardino-Balkaria & Karachay-Cherkessia (Russia)
KashubiancsbIndo-European, Slavic, West, Lechitic50,000{{e18|csb|Kashubian }}Poland
KazakhkkTurkic, Kipchak1,000,000About 10 million in Kazakhstan. {{e18|kaz|Kazakh }}. Technically, the westernmost portions of Kazakhstan (Atyrau Region, West Kazakhstan Region) are in Europe, with a total population of less than one million.KazakhstanAstrakhan Oblast (Russia)
KhwarshikhvNortheast Caucasian, Tsezic1,700{{e18|khv|Khwarshi}}
KomikvUralic, Finno-Ugric, Permic220,000220,000 native speakers out of an ethnic population of 550,000.

Combines Komi-Permyak (koi) with 65,000 speakers and Komi-Zyrian (kpv) with 156,000 speakers. {{e18|kom|Komi}}

Komi Republic (Russia)
KubachiughNortheast Caucasian, Dargin7,000{{e18|ugh|Kubachi}}
KumykkumTurkic, Kipchak450,000{{Cite web |url=http://www.gks.ru/free_doc/new_site/population/demo/per-itog/tab6.xls |title=2010 Russian Census |access-date=27 May 2022 |archive-date=6 October 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211006173252/http://www.gks.ru/free_doc/new_site/population/demo/per-itog/tab6.xls |url-status=dead }}Dagestan (Russia)
KvenfkvUralic, Finno-Ugric, Finnic2,000-10,000{{Cite web |title=Kvensk språk |url=https://kvener.no/kvenene/kvensk-sprak/ |access-date=2025-01-08 |website=Norske kveners forbund |language=nb-NO}}Norway
LaklbeNortheast Caucasian, Lak152,050{{e18|lbe|Lak}}Dagestan (Russia)
LatinlaIndo-European, Italic, Latino-FaliscanextinctfewContemporary Latin: People fluent in Latin as a second language are probably in the dozens, not hundreds. Reginald Foster (as of 2013) estimated "no more than 100" according to Robin Banerji, [https://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-21412604 Pope resignation: Who speaks Latin these days?], BBC News, 12 February 2013.Vatican City
LatvianlvIndo-European, Baltic1,750,000{{e18|lav|Latvian }}Latvia
LezginlezNortheast Caucasian, Lezgic397,000{{e18|lez|Lezgic}}Dagestan (Russia)
LigurianlijIndo-European, Romance, Western, Gallo-Italic500,000{{e18|lij|Ligurian}}Monaco (Monégasque dialect is the "national language")Liguria (Italy), Carloforte and Calasetta (Sardinia, Italy){{cite web|title=Legge Regionale 15 ottobre 1997, n. 26|url=http://www.regione.sardegna.it/j/v/86?v=9&c=72&file=1997026|publisher=Regione autonoma della Sardegna – Regione Autònoma de Sardigna|access-date=21 October 2021|archive-date=26 February 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210226213750/http://www.regione.sardegna.it/j/v/86?v=9&c=72&file=1997026|url-status=dead}}{{cite web|title=Legge Regionale 3 Luglio 2018, n. 22|url=http://www.regione.sardegna.it/j/v/2604?s=374982&v=2&c=93175&t=1&anno=|publisher=Regione autonoma della Sardegna – Regione Autònoma de Sardigna|access-date=21 October 2021|archive-date=5 March 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190305131152/http://www.regione.sardegna.it/j/v/2604?s=374982&v=2&c=93175&t=1&anno=|url-status=dead}}
Limburgishli
lim
Indo-European, Germanic, West, Low Franconian1,300,000 (2001){{cite web|date=2019-11-19|title=Redirected|url=https://www.ethnologue.com/archive-redirect|access-date=2021-03-12|website=Ethnologue|language=en}}Limburg (Belgium), Limburg (Netherlands)
LithuanianltIndo-European, Baltic3,000,000{{e18|lit|Lithuanian }}Lithuania
LivonianlivUralic, Finno-Ugric, Finnic1{{cite web|title="Kūldaläpš. Zeltabērns" – izdota lībiešu valodas grāmata bērniem un vecākiem|url=https://www.lsm.lv/raksts/dzive--stils/vecaki-un-berni/kuldalaps-zeltaberns--izdota-libiesu-valodas-gramata-berniem-un-vecakiem.a478524/|date=2022-10-18|publisher=Latvijas Sabiedriskie Mediji (LSM.lv)|accessdate=2022-10-22}}210{{Cite web |url=http://www.livones.net/valoda/?raksts=8701 |title=LĪBIEŠU VALODAS SITUĀCIJA |access-date=2012-01-19 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140202235047/http://www.livones.net/valoda/?raksts=8701 |archive-date=2014-02-02 |url-status=dead}}Latvia{{refn|Recognized and protected, but not official.|group=nb|name=Not Official}}
LombardlmoIndo-European, Romance, Western, Gallo-Italic3,600,000{{e18|lmo|Lombard }}Lombardy (Italy)
Low German (Low Saxon)nds
wep
Indo-European, Germanic, West1,000,0002.6 million cited as estimate of all Germans who speak Platt "well or very well" (including L2; 4.3 million cited as the number of all speakers including those with "moderate" knowledge) in 2009. [http://www.taz.de/1/archiv/print-archiv/printressorts/digi-artikel/?ressort=ra&dig=2009%2F02%2F21%2Fa0171&cHash=e05509f6d9/ Heute in Bremen. „Ohne Zweifel gefährdet"]. Frerk Möller im Interview, taz, 21. Februar 2009.

However, Wirrer (1998) described Low German as "moribund".Jan Wirrer: Zum Status des Niederdeutschen. In: Zeitschrift für Germanistische Linguistik. 26, 1998, S. 309. The number of native speakers is unknown, estimated at 1 million by SIL Ethnologue. {{e18|nds|Low German}}, {{e18|wep|Westphalian}}

2,600,000Schleswig-Holstein (Germany)The question whether Low German should be considered as subsumed under "German" as the official language of Germany has a complicated legal history. In the wake of the ratification of the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages (1998), Schleswig-Holstein has explicitly recognized Low German as a regional language with official status ([http://www.lexsoft.de/cgi-bin/lexsoft/justizportal_nrw.cgi?xid=148815,381 § 82b LVwG]).
LudicludUralic, Finno-Ugric, Finnic300{{e18|lud|Ludic}}
LuxembourgishlbIndo-European, Germanic, West, High German336,000{{e18|ltz|Luxembourgish }}386,000LuxembourgWallonia (Belgium)
MacedonianmkIndo-European, Slavic, South, Eastern1,400,000{{e18|mkd|Macedonian }}North Macedonia
MainfränkischvmfIndo-European, Germanic, West, High German, Upper4,900,000German dialect, {{e18|vmf|Main-Franconian}}
MaltesemtSemitic, Arabic520,000{{e18|mlt|Maltese }}Malta
ManxgvIndo-European, Celtic, Goidelic230{{e18|glv|Manx }}2,300{{cite web |url=https://www.theguardian.com/education/2015/apr/02/how-manx-language-came-back-from-dead-isle-of-man |title=How the Manx language came back from the dead |last1=Whitehead |first1=Sarah |date=2 April 2015 |website=theguardian.com|access-date=4 April 2015}}Isle of Man
Marichm
mhr
mrj
Uralic, Finno-Ugric500,000{{e18|chm|Mari }}Mari El (Russia)
Meänkieli

|fit

|Uralic, Finno-Ugric, Finnic

|40,000{{Cite web |title=Meänkieli nu och då |url=https://www.isof.se/nationella-minoritetssprak/meankieli/lar-dig-mer-om-meankieli/meankieli-nu-och-da |access-date=2025-01-08 |website=www.isof.se |language=sv}}

|55,000

|

|Sweden

Megleno-RomanianruqIndo-European, Romance, Eastern3,000{{e18|ruq|Megleno-Romanian }}
MindericodrcIndo-European, Romance, Western, West Iberian500{{e18|drc|Minderico}}
MirandesemwlIndo-European, Romance, Western, West Iberian15,000{{e18|mwl|Mirandese }}Miranda do Douro (Portugal)
MokshamdfUralic, Finno-Ugric, Mordvinic2,000{{e18|mdf|Moksha}}Mordovia (Russia)
MontenegrincnrIndo-European, Slavic, South, Western, Serbo-Croatian240,700{{Cite news|url=https://www.ethnologue.com/country/ME/languages|title=Montenegro|work=Ethnologue|access-date=2018-04-29|language=en}}Montenegro
NeapolitannapIndo-European, Romance, Italo-Dalmatian5,700,000{{e18|nap|Neapolitan }}Campania (Italy)In 2008, law was passed by the Region of Campania, stating that the Neapolitan language was to be legally protected. {{cite web |url=http://www.denaro.it/VisArticolo.aspx?IdArt=548026 |title=Tutela del dialetto, primo via libera al Ddl campano |work=Il Denaro |date=15 October 2008 |access-date=22 June 2013 |language=it |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110727043316/http://www.denaro.it/VisArticolo.aspx?IdArt=548026 |archive-date=27 July 2011 |df=dmy-all }}
NenetsyrkUralic, Samoyedic4,000total 22,000 native speakers (2010 Russian census) out of an ethnic population of 44,000. Most of these are in Siberia, with about 8,000 ethnic Nenets in European Russia (2010 census, mostly in Nenets Autonomous Okrug)Nenets Autonomous Okrug (Russia)
NogainogTurkic, Kipchak87,000{{e18|nog|Nogai}}Dagestan (Russia)
NormannrfIndo-European, Romance, Western, Gallo-Romance, Oïl50,000{{e18|nrf|Jèrriais }}Guernsey (United Kingdom), Jersey (United Kingdom)
NorwegiannoIndo-European, Germanic, North5,200,000{{Cite news|url=https://www.ethnologue.com/language/nor|title=Norwegian|work=Ethnologue|access-date=2018-08-06|language=en}}Norway
OccitanocIndo-European, Romance, Western, Occitano-Romance500,000{{e18|oci|Occitan}}.

Includes Auvergnat, Gascon, Languedocien, Limousin, Provençal, Vivaro-Alpine. Most native speakers are in France; their number is unknown, as varieties of Occitan are treated as French dialects with no official status.

Catalonia (Spain){{refn|The Aranese dialect, in Val d'Aran county.|group=nb|name=Aranese}}
OssetianosIndo-European, Indo-Iranian, Iranian, Eastern450,000Total 570,000, of which 450,000 in the Russian Federation. {{e18|oss|Ossetian}}North Ossetia-Alania (Russia), South Ossetia
Palatinate GermanpflIndo-European, Germanic, West, High German, Central1,000,000German dialect, {{e18|pfl|Palatinate German}}
PicardpcdIndo-European, Romance, Western, Gallo-Romance, Oïl200,000{{e18|pcd|Picard }}Wallonia (Belgium)
PiedmontesepmsIndo-European, Romance, Western, Gallo-Italic1,600,000{{e18|pms|Piedmontese }}Piedmont (Italy)Piedmontese was recognised as Piedmont's regional language by the regional parliament in 1999. [http://www.consiglioregionale.piemonte.it/mzodgint/jsp/AttoSelezionato.jsp?ATTO=61118 Motion 1118 in the Piedmontese Regional Parliament, Approvazione da parte del Senato del Disegno di Legge che tutela le minoranze linguistiche sul territorio nazionale – Approfondimenti, approved unanimously on 15 December 1999], [http://www.gioventurapiemonteisa.net/wp-content/uploads/2007/05/odg1118.pdf Text of motion 1118 in the Piedmontese Regional Parliament, Consiglio Regionale del Piemonte, Ordine del Giorno 1118].
PolishplIndo-European, Slavic, West, Lechitic38,500,000{{e18|pol|Polish }}Poland
PortugueseptIndo-European, Romance, Western, West Iberian10,000,000{{e18|por|Portuguese }}Portugal
Rhaeto-Romancefur
lld
roh
Indo-European, Romance, Western370,000Includes Friulian, Romansh, Ladin. {{e18|fur|Friulian}} {{e18|lld|Ladin }} {{e18|roh|Romansch }}SwitzerlandVeneto Belluno, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, South Tyrol,[http://www.regione.taa.it/normativa/statuto_speciale.pdf Statuto Speciale Per Il Trentino-Alto Adige] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181126033052/http://www.regione.taa.it/normativa/statuto_speciale.pdf |date=26 November 2018 }} (1972), Art. 102. & Trentino (Italy)
Ripuarian (Platt)kshIndo-European, Germanic, West, High German, Central900,000German dialect, {{e18|ksh|Kölsch}}
RomagnolrgnIndo-European, Romance, Western, Gallo-Italic
RomaniromIndo-European, Indo-Iranian, Indo-Aryan, Western1,500,000

{{e18|rmn|Romani, Balkan}}

{{e18|rml|Romani, Baltic}}

{{e18|rmc|Romani, Carpathian}}

{{e18|rmf|Romani, Finnish}}

{{e18|rmo|Romani, Sinte}}

{{e18|rmy|Romani, Vlax }}

{{e18|rmw|Romani, Welsh}}

Kosovo{{refn|group=nb|name=Kosovo}}Constitution of Kosovo, [http://kushtetutakosoves.info/repository/docs/Constitution.of.the.Republic.of.Kosovo.pdf p. 8] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171011113028/http://www.kushtetutakosoves.info/repository/docs/Constitution.of.the.Republic.of.Kosovo.pdf |date=11 October 2017 }}
RomanianroIndo-European, Romance, Eastern24,000,000{{e18|ron|Romanian }}28,000,000{{cite web|title=Româna|url=http://unilat.org/DPEL/Promotion/L_Odyssee_des_langues/Roumain/ro|website=unilat.org|publisher=Latin Union|access-date=2 April 2018|language=ro|archive-date=29 October 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141029141605/http://unilat.org/DPEL/Promotion/L_Odyssee_des_langues/Roumain/ro|url-status=dead}}Moldova, RomaniaMount Athos (Greece), Vojvodina (Serbia)
RussianruIndo-European, Slavic, East106,000,000L1: 119 million in the Russian Federation (of which c. 83 million in European Russia), 14.3 million in Ukraine, 6.67 million in Belarus, 0.67 million in Latvia, 0.38 million in Estonia, 0.38 million in Moldova.

L1+L2: c. 100 million in European Russia, 39 million in Ukraine, 7 million in Belarus, 7 million in Poland, 2 million in Latvia, c. 2 million in the European portion of Kazakhstan, 1.8 million in Moldova, 1.1 million in Estonia. {{e18|rus|Russian}}.

160,000,000Belarus, Kazakhstan, RussiaMount Athos (Greece), Gagauzia (Moldova), Left Bank of the Dniester (Moldova), Ukraine
RusynrueIndo-European, Slavic, East70,000{{e18|rue|Rusyn}}
RutulrutNortheast Caucasian, Lezgic36,400{{e18|rut|Rutul}}Dagestan (Russia)
SamiseUralic, Finno-Ugric23,000mostly Northern Sami (sma), ca. 20,000 speakers; smaller communities of Lule Sami (smj, c. 2,000 speakers) and other variants. {{e18|sme|Northern Sami}}, {{e18|smj|Lule Sami}}

{{e18|sma|Southern Sami}}, {{e18|sjd|Kildin Sami}}, {{e18|sms|Skolt Sami}}, {{e18|smn|Inari Sami}}.

NorwaySweden, Finland
SardinianscIndo-European, Romance1,350,000AA. VV. Calendario Atlante De Agostini 2017, Novara, Istituto Geografico De Agostini, 2016, p. 230Sardinia (Italy)
ScotsscoIndo-European, Germanic, West, Anglo-Frisian, Anglic110,000{{e18|sco|Scots }}Scotland (United Kingdom), County Donegal (Republic of Ireland), Northern Ireland (United Kingdom)
Scottish GaelicgdIndo-European, Celtic, Goidelic57,000{{e18|gla|Gaelic, Scottish }}Scotland (United Kingdom)
SerbiansrIndo-European, Slavic, South, Western, Serbo-Croatian9,000,000{{e18|srp|Serbian }}Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo{{refn|group=nb|name=Kosovo}}, SerbiaCroatia, Mount Athos (Greece), North Macedonia, Montenegro
SicilianscnIndo-European, Romance, Italo-Dalmatian4,700,000{{e18|scn|Sicilian }}Sicily (Italy)
SilesianszlIndo-European, Slavic, West, Lechitic522,000{{e19|szl|Silesian }}
Silesian GermansliIndo-European, Germanic, West, High German, Central11,000German dialect, {{e18|sli|Lower Silesian}}
SlovakskIndo-European, Slavic, West, Czech–Slovak5,200,000{{e18|slk|Slovak }}SlovakiaVojvodina (Serbia), Czech Republic
SloveneslIndo-European, Slavic, South, Western2,100,000{{e18|slv|Slovene }}SloveniaFriuli-Venezia Giulia (Italy)
Sorbian (Wendish)wenIndo-European, Slavic, West20,000{{e18|hsb|Sorbian, Upper }}Brandenburg & Sachsen (Germany)GVG § 184 Satz 2; VwVfGBbg § 23 Abs. 5; SächsSorbG § 9, right to use Sorbian in communication with the authorities guaranteed for the "Sorbian settlement area" (Sorbisches Siedlungsgebiet, Lusatia).
SpanishesIndo-European, Romance, Western, West Iberian47,000,000{{e18|spa|Spanish }}76,000,000SpainGibraltar (United Kingdom)
Swabian GermanswgIndo-European, Germanic, West, High German, Upper, Alemannic820,000German dialect, {{e18|swg|Swabian German}}
SwedishsvIndo-European, Germanic, North11,100,000{{e18|swe|Swedish }}13,280,000Sweden, Finland, Åland and Estonia
Swiss GermangswIndo-European, Germanic, West, High German, Upper, Alemannic5,000,000German dialect, {{e18|swg|Swiss German}}Switzerland (as German)
TabasarantabNortheast Caucasian, Lezgic126,900{{e18|tab|Tabassaran }}Dagestan (Russia)
TattttIndo-European, Iranian, Western30,000

{{e18|ttt|Tat}}, {{e18|jdt|Judeo-Tat}}

2,000 speakers in the Russian Federation according to the 2010 census (including Judeo-Tat). About 28,000 speakers in Azerbaijan; most speakers live along or just north of the Caucasus ridge (and are thus technically in Europe), with some also settling just south of the Caucasus ridge, in the South Caucasus.

Dagestan (Russia)
TatarttTurkic, Kipchak4,300,000{{e18|tat|Tatar}}Tatarstan (Russia)
TinditinNortheast Caucasian, Avar–Andic2,200{{e18|tin|Tindi}}
TsezddoNortheast Caucasian, Tsezic13,000{{e18|ddi|Tsez}}
TurkishtrTurkic, Oghuz15,752,673c. 12 million in European Turkey, 0.6 million in Bulgaria, 0.6 million in Cyprus and Northern Cyprus; and 2,679,765 L1 speakers in other countries in Europe according to a Eurobarometer survey in 2012: https://languageknowledge.eu/languages/turkishTurkey, CyprusNorthern Cyprus
UdmurtudmUralic, Finno-Ugric, Permic340,000{{e18|udm|Udmurt}}Udmurtia (Russia)
UkrainianukIndo-European, Slavic, East32,600,000{{e18|ukr|Ukrainian }}UkraineLeft Bank of the Dniester (Moldova)
Upper SaxonsxuIndo-European, Germanic, West, High German, Central2,000,000German dialect, {{e18|sxu|Upper Saxon German}}
VepsianvepUralic, Finno-Ugric, Finnic1,640Russian Census 2010. {{e18|vep|Veps}}Republic of Karelia (Russia)
VenetianvecIndo-European, Romance, Italo-Dalmatian3,800,000{{e18|vec|Venetian }}Veneto (Italy)A motion to recognise Venetian as an official regional language has been approved by the Regional Council of Veneto in 2007. {{cite web |url=http://www.consiglioveneto.it/crvportal/leggi/2007/07lr0008.html?numLegge=8&annoLegge=2007&tipoLegge=Alr |title=Consiglio Regionale Veneto – Leggi Regionali |publisher=Consiglioveneto.it |access-date=2009-05-06 |archive-date=26 May 2024 |archive-url=https://archive.today/20240526190947/https://www.webcitation.org/6ILc8Mb9J?url=http://www.consiglioveneto.it/crvportal/leggi/2007/07lr0008.html%3FnumLegge=8 |url-status=dead }}
VõrovroUralic, Finno-Ugric, Finnic87,000{{e18|vro|Võro }}Võru County (Estonia)
VoticvotUralic, Finno-Ugric, Finnic21{{Cite web |title=Итоги Всероссийской переписи населения 2020 года. Таблица 6. Население по родному языку. |trans-title=Results of the All-Russian population census 2020. Table 6. population according to native language. |url=https://rosstat.gov.ru/vpn_popul |access-date=2023-11-01 |website=rosstat.gov.ru |archive-date=24 January 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200124160257/http://rosstat.gov.ru/vpn_popul |url-status=dead }}
WalloonwaIndo-European, Romance, Western, Gallo-Romance, Oïl600,000{{e18|wln|Walloon }}Wallonia (Belgium)
Walser GermanwaeIndo-European, Germanic, West, High German, Upper, Alemannic20,000Highest Alemannic dialects, {{e18|wae|Walser German}}
WelshcyIndo-European, Celtic, Brittonic562,000{{e18|cym|Welsh }}750,000Wales (United Kingdom)
WymysoryswymIndo-European, Germanic, West, High German70Moribund German dialect spoken in Wilamowice,

Poland. 70 speakers recorded in 2006. {{e18|wym|Wymysorys}}

YenishyecIndo-European, Germanic, West, High German16,000{{e18|yec|Yenish}}Switzerland{{refn|Recognized and protected, but not official.|group=nb|name=Not Official}}
YiddishyiIndo-European, Germanic, West, High German600,000Total population estimated at 1.5 million as of 1991, of which c. 40% in Ukraine. {{e18|yid|Yiddish }}, {{e18|ydd| Eastern Yiddish }}, {{e18|yih|Western Yiddish }}Bosnia and Herzegovina{{refn|Recognized and protected, but not official.|group=nb|name=Not Official}}, Netherlands{{refn|Recognized and protected, but not official.|group=nb|name=Not Official}}, Poland{{refn|Recognized and protected, but not official.|group=nb|name=Not Official}}, Romania{{refn|Recognized and protected, but not official.|group=nb|name=Not Official}}, Sweden{{refn|Recognized and protected, but not official.|group=nb|name=Not Official}}, Ukraine{{refn|Recognized and protected, but not official.|group=nb|name=Not Official}}
ZeelandiczeaIndo-European, Germanic, West, Low Franconian220,000{{e18|zea|Zeelandic}}

= Languages spoken in Armenia, Azerbaijan, Cyprus, Georgia, and Turkey =

There are various definitions of Europe, which may or may not include all or parts of Turkey, Cyprus, Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia. For convenience, the languages and associated statistics for all five of these countries are grouped together on this page, as they are usually presented at a national, rather than subnational, level.

class="wikitable sortable"
rowspan=2|Name

! rowspan=2|ISO-
639

! rowspan=2|Classification

! colspan=2| Speakers in expanded geopolitical Europe

! colspan=2|Official status

data-sort- type="number" style="width:90pt;"|L1

!data-sort-type="number"|L1+L2

!National{{refn|Sovereign states, defined as United Nations member states and observer states. 'Recognised minority language' status is not included.|group=nb}}

!Regional

AbkhazabNorthwest Caucasian, AbazgiAbkhazia/Georgia:Abkhazia is a de facto state recognized by Russia and a handful of other states, but considered by Georgia to be ruling over a Georgian region 191,000{{e18|abk|Abkhazian}}
Turkey: 44,000{{cite web

| editor-last = Lewis

| editor-first = M. Paul

| title = Ethnologue report for Turkey (Asia)

| work = Ethnologue: Languages of the World

| publisher = SIL International

| year = 2009

| url = http://www.ethnologue.org/show_country.asp?name=TRA

| access-date = 2009-09-08

| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100707065422/http://www.ethnologue.org/show_country.asp?name=TRA

| archive-date = 2010-07-07

| url-status = dead

}}

AbkhaziaAbkhazia
Adyghe (West Circassian)adyNorthwest Caucasian, CircassianTurkey: 316,000
AlbaniansqIndo-European, AlbanianTurkey: 66,000 (Tosk)
ArabicarAfro-Asiatic, Semitic, WestTurkey: 2,437,000 Not counting post-2014 Syrian refugees
ArmenianhyIndo-European, ArmenianArmenia: 3 million{{cite web|url=https://www.armstat.am/file/article/1._bajin_5_583-664.pdf|title=Armenian 2011 census data, chapter 5}}
Azerbaijan: 145,000 {{citation needed|date=June 2020}}
Georgia: around 0.2 million ethnic Armenians (Abkhazia: 44,870{{cite web| url = http://www.ethno-kavkaz.narod.ru/rnabkhazia.html| title = Ethno-Caucasus – Население Кавказа – Республика Абхазия – Население Абхазии}})
Turkey: 61,000
Cyprus: 668{{cite report |author=Council of Europe|date=2014-01-16|title=European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages. Fourth periodical presented to the Secretary General of the Council of Europe in accordance with Article 15 of the Charter. CYPRUS|url=http://www.coe.int/t/dg4/education/minlang/Report/PeriodicalReports/CyprusPR4_en.pdf}}{{rp|3}}
Armenia
Azerbaijan
Cyprus
AzerbaijaniazTurkic, OghuzAzerbaijan 9 million{{citation needed|date=June 2020}}Azeri community in Dagestan excluded
Turkey: 540,000
Georgia 0.2 million
Azerbaijan
BatsbibblNortheast Caucasian, NakhGeorgia: 500{{cite web|url=http://www.unesco.org/culture/languages-atlas/en/atlasmap/language-id-1041.html|title=UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in danger|website=www.unesco.org|language=en|access-date=2018-04-17}}{{update inline|date=June 2020}}
BulgarianbgIndo-European, Slavic, SouthTurkey: 351,000
Crimean TatarcrhTurkic, KipchakTurkey: 100,000
GeorgiankaKartvelian, Karto-ZanGeorgia: 3,224,696
Turkey: 151,000
Azerbaijan: 9,192 ethnic Georgians[http://www.azstat.org/statinfo/demoqraphic/en/AP_/1_5.xls Censuses of Republic of Azerbaijan 1979, 1989, 1999, 2009]{{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121130101713/http://www.azstat.org/statinfo/demoqraphic/en/AP_/1_5.xls|date=30 November 2012 }}
Georgia
GreekelIndo-European, HellenicCyprus: 679,883{{cite web|title=Cyprus|work=Euromosaic III|url=http://ec.europa.eu/languages/documents/cy_en.pdf|access-date=3 July 2013}}{{rp|2.2}}
Turkey: 3,600
Cyprus
JuhurijdtIndo-European, Indo-Iranian, Iranian, SouthwestAzerbaijan: 24,000 (1989){{cite web |url=http://www.tedsnet.de/georgien/Azer.html |title=Ethnologue: Azerbaijan |publisher=Tedsnet.de |date= |accessdate=2021-12-03 |archive-date=22 September 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230922172424/http://tedsnet.de/georgien/Azer.html |url-status=dead }}{{update inline|date=June 2020}}
KurdishkurIndo-European, Indo-Iranian, Iranian, NorthwestTurkey: 15 millionSIL Ethnologue gives estimates, broken down by dialect group, totalling 31 million, but with the caveat of "Very provisional figures for Northern Kurdish speaker population". Ethnologue estimates for dialect groups:

Northern: 20.2M (undated; 15M in Turkey for 2009),

Central: 6.75M (2009),

Southern: 3M (2000),

Laki: 1M (2000).

The Swedish Nationalencyklopedin listed Kurdish in its "Världens 100 största språk 2007" (The World's 100 Largest Languages in 2007), citing an estimate of 20.6 million native speakers.


Azerbaijan: 9,000{{citation needed|date=June 2020}}

KurmanjikmrIndo-European, Indo-Iranian, Iranian, NorthwestTurkey: 8.13 million{{cite journal| title=Mutual intelligibility of a Kurmanji and a Zazaki dialect spoken in the province of Elazığ, Turkey | publisher=De Gruyter academic publishing | date= 1 December 2021 | doi=10.1515/applirev-2020-0151 | last1=Ozek | first1=Fatih | last2=Saglam | first2=Bilgit | last3=Gooskens | first3=Charlotte | journal=Applied Linguistics Review | volume=14 | issue=5 | pages=1411–1449 | s2cid=244782650 | doi-access=free }}
Armenia: 33,509{{cite web|url=http://armstat.am/file/article/sv_03_13a_520.pdf|title=Article|website=armstat.am}}
Georgia: 14,000 {{citation needed|date=June 2020}}
Armenia
LazlzzKartvelian, Karto-Zan, ZanTurkey: 20,000{{cite web |url=http://www.ethnologue.com/show_language.asp?code=lzz |title=Laz |work=Ethnologue}}
Georgia: 2,000
Megleno-RomanianruqIndo-European, Italic, Romance, EastTurkey: 4–5,000Thede Kahl (2006): The islamisation of the Meglen Vlachs (Megleno-Romanians): The village of Nânti (Nótia) and the "Nântinets" in present-day Turkey, Nationalities Papers, 34:01, p80-81: "Assuming that nearly the total population of Nânti emigrated, then the number of emigrants must have been around 4,000. If the reported number of people living there today is added, the whole Meglen Vlachs population is c. 5,000. Although that number is only a rough estimate and may be exaggerated by the individual interviewees, it might correspond to reality."
MingrelianxmfKartvelian, Karto-Zan, ZanGeorgia (including Abkhazia): 344,000{{cite web| url = http://endangeredlanguages.com/lang/10906| title = Endangered Languages Project: Mingrelian}}
Pontic GreekpntIndo-European, HellenicTurkey: greater than 5,000{{cite journal|last=Özkan|first=Hakan|title=The Pontic Greek spoken by Muslims in the villages of Beşköy in the province of present-day Trabzon|journal=Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies|year=2013|volume=37|issue=1|pages=130–150|doi=10.1179/0307013112z.00000000023}}
Armenia: 900 ethnic Caucasus Greeks{{cite web| url = http://armstat.am/file/article/sv_03_13a_520.pdf| title = 2011 Armenian Census}}
Georgia: 5,689 Caucasus Greeks{{cite web |url = http://geostat.ge/cms/site_images/_files/english/population/Census_release_ENG_2016.pdf |title = 2014 Georgian census |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170205175903/http://geostat.ge/cms/site_images/_files/english/population/Census_release_ENG_2016.pdf |archive-date=5 February 2017 |url-status=dead}}
Romani language and Domari languagerom, dmtIndo-European, Indo-Iranian, IndicTurkey: 500,000
RussianruIndo-European, Balto-Slavic, SlavicArmenia: 15,000{{cite web|url=http://demoscope.ru/weekly/2006/0251/tema01.php|script-title=ru:Падение статуса русского языка на постсоветском пространстве|publisher=Demoscope.ru|access-date=2016-08-19|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161025204352/http://demoscope.ru/weekly/2006/0251/tema01.php|archive-date=2016-10-25|title= }}
Azerbaijan: 250,000
Georgia: 130,000
Armenia: about 0.9 million{{cite web|url=http://demoscope.ru/weekly/2008/0329/tema03.php|script-title=ru:Русскоязычие распространено не только там, где живут русские|website=demoscope.ru|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161023011719/http://www.demoscope.ru/weekly/2008/0329/tema03.php|archive-date=2016-10-23|title= }}
Azerbaijan: about 2.6 million
Georgia: about 1 million
Cyprus: 20,984{{cite web |url=http://www.mof.gov.cy/mof/cystat/statistics.nsf/All/548284B11BF2A3B1C2257A06003204B2?OpenDocument&print |script-title=el:Στατιστική Υπηρεσία – Πληθυσμός και Κοινωνικές Συνθήκες – Απογραφή Πληθυσμού – Ανακοινώσεις – Αποτελέσματα Απογραφής Πληθυσμού, 2011 |language=el |publisher=Demoscope.ru |access-date=2013-06-18 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130507080606/http://www.mof.gov.cy/mof/cystat/statistics.nsf/All/548284B11BF2A3B1C2257A06003204B2?OpenDocument&print |archive-date=2013-05-07 |title= }}
Abkhazia
South Ossetia
Armenia
Azerbaijan
SvansvaKartvelian, SvanGeorgia (incl. Abkhazia): 30,000{{cite web| url = http://endangeredlanguages.com/lang/3042| title = Endangered Languages Project: Svan}}
TattttIndo-European, Indo-Aryan, Iranian, SouthwestAzerbaijan: 10,000John M. Clifton, Gabriela Deckinga, Laura Lucht, Calvin Tiessen, [http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.487.2395&rep=rep1&type=pdf "Sociolinguistic Situation of the Tat and Mountain Jews in Azerbaijan,"] In Clifton, ed., Studies in Languages of Azerbaijan, vol. 2 (Azerbaijan & St Petersburg, Russia: Academy of Sciences of Azerbaijan & SIL International 2005). Page 3.{{update inline|date=June 2020}}
TurkishtrTurkic, OghuzTurkey: 66,850,000
Cyprus: 1,405{{cite book |date=June 2013 |chapter=Population enumerated by age, sex, language spoken and district (1.10.2011) (sheet D1A) |title=Population – Country of Birth, Citizenship Category, Country of Citizenship, Language, 2011 |publisher=CYstat |url=http://www.mof.gov.cy/mof/cystat/statistics.nsf/All/8B96E149FE049F49C2257AD90055559F/$file/POP_CEN_11-POP_FOREIGN_LANG-EN-140613.xls?OpenElement}}{{Dead link|date=February 2020 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} + 265,100 in the North{{cite web|url=http://nufussayimi.devplan.org/Census%202006.pdf |title=Census.XLS |access-date=14 February 2014 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130116120824/http://nufussayimi.devplan.org/Census%202006.pdf |archive-date=16 January 2013 |df=dmy }}
Turkey
Cyprus
Northern Cyprus
ZazakizzaIndo-European, Indo-Iranian, Iranian, NorthwestTurkey: 3–4 million (2009){{Cite web|url=https://linguistlist.org/multitree/|title=Multitree | The LINGUIST List|website=linguistlist.org|accessdate=20 May 2023}}{{Cite web |title=Glottolog 4.5 - Zaza |url=https://glottolog.org/resource/languoid/id/zaza1246 |access-date=2022-05-21 |website=glottolog.org}}

Immigrant communities

Recent (post–1945) immigration to Europe introduced substantial communities of speakers of non-European languages.

The largest such communities include Arabic speakers (see Arabs in Europe)

and Turkish speakers (beyond European Turkey and the historical sphere of influence of the Ottoman Empire, see Turks in Europe).{{citation |last=Cole|first=Jeffrey|author-link=Jeffrey Cole|year=2011|title=Ethnic Groups of Europe: An Encyclopedia|publisher=ABC-CLIO|isbn=978-1-59884-302-6|page=367}}

Armenians, Berbers, and Kurds have diaspora communities of {{circa}} 1–2,000,000 each. The various languages of Africa and languages of India form numerous smaller diaspora communities.

;List of the largest immigrant languages

class="wikitable sortable"
NameISO 639ClassificationNativeEthnic diaspora
ArabicarAfro-Asiatic, Semitic5,000,000

[https://www.ethnologue.com/country/FR France]: 4,000,000,

[https://www.ethnologue.com/country/DE Germany]: 500k (2015),

[https://www.ethnologue.com/country/ES Spain]: 200k

[https://www.ethnologue.com/country/GB UK]: 159k (2011 census)

Unknown
TurkishtrTurkic, Oghuz3,000,000

[https://www.ethnologue.com/country/DE Germany]: 1,510k,

[https://www.ethnologue.com/country/FR France]: 444k,

[https://www.ethnologue.com/country/NL Netherlands]: 388k,

[https://www.ethnologue.com/country/AT Austria]: 197k,

[https://www.ethnologue.com/country/RU Russia]: 146k,

[https://www.ethnologue.com/country/GB UK]: 99k,

[https://www.ethnologue.com/country/CH Switzerland]: 44k,

[https://www.ethnologue.com/country/SE Sweden]: 44.

7,000,000See Turks in Europe: only counting recent (post-Ottoman era) immigration:

Germany: 4,000,000,

France: 1,000,000,

UK: 500,000,

Netherlands: 500,000,

Austria: 400,000,

Switzerland, Sweden and Russia: 200,000 each.

ArmenianhyIndo-European1,000,000830k in Russia (2010 census), 100k in Ukraine ([https://www.ethnologue.com/18/language/hye/ SIL Ethnologue 2015]).

3,000,0002,000,000 Armenians in Russia.

France 750k,

Ukraine 100k,

Germany 100k,

Greece 60-80k,

Spain 40k,

Belgium 30k,

Czechia 12k,

Sweden 12k,

Bulgaria 10-22k,

Belarus 8k,

Austria 6k,

Poland 3-50k,

Hungary 3-30k,

Netherlands 3-9k,

Switzerland 3-5k,

Cyprus 3k,

Moldova 1-3k,

UK 1-2k.

BengalibnIndo-European, Indo-Aryan600,000Sylheti: 300k in the UK, Bengali: 221k in the UK.1,000,000see British Indian, Bangladeshi diaspora, Bengali diaspora.
KurdishkuIndo-European, Iranian, Western600,000[https://www.ethnologue.com/country/DE Germany]: 541k1,000,000Kurdish population: mostly Kurds in Germany, Kurds in France, Kurds in Sweden.
AzerbaijaniazTurkic, Oghuz500,000515k in Russia (2010 census)700,000Azerbaijani diaspora: Russia 600k, Ukraine 45k, not counting 400,000 in Azerbaijan's Quba-Khachmaz Region (Shabran District, Khachmaz District, Quba District, Qusar District, Siyazan District) technically in Europe (being north of the Caucasus watershed).
KabylekabAfro-Asiatic, Berber500,000[https://www.ethnologue.com/country/FR France]: 500k1,000,000Kabyle people in France: 1,000,000.
ChinesezhSino-Tibetan, Sinitic300,000Germany 120k, Russia: 70k, UK 66k, Spain 20k.2,000,000Overseas Chinese: France 700,000, UK: 500,000, Russia: 300,000, Italy: 300,000, Germany: 200,000, Spain: 100,000.
UrduurIndo-European, Indo-Aryan300,000UK: 269k (2011 census).1,800,000Pakistani diaspora, the majority Pakistanis in the UK.
UzbekuzTurkic, Karluk300,000Russia: 274k (2010 census)2,000,000see Uzbeks in Russia.
PersianfaIndo-European, Iranian, Western300,000UK: 76k, Sweden: 74k, Germany: 72k, France 40k.400,000Iranian diaspora: Germany: 100k, Sweden: 100k, UK: 50k, Russia: 50k, Netherlands: 35k, Denmark: 20k.
PunjabipaIndo-European, Indo-Aryan300,000UK: 280k700,000see British Punjabis
GujaratiguIndo-European, Indo-Aryan200,000UK: 213k600,000see Gujarati diaspora
TamiltaDravidian200,000UK: 101k, [https://www.ethnologue.com/country/DE Germany]: 35k, Switzerland: 22k.500,000Tamil diaspora: UK 300k, France 100k, Germany 50k, Switzerland 40k, u Netherlands, 20k, Norway 10k.
SomalisoAfro-Asiatic, Cushitic200,000

[https://www.ethnologue.com/country/GB UK]: 86k,

[https://www.ethnologue.com/country/SE Sweden]: 53k,

[https://www.ethnologue.com/country/IT Italy]: 50k

400,000Somali diaspora:

UK: 114k, Sweden: 64k, Norway: 42k, Netherlands: 39k, Germany: 34k, Denmark: 21k, Finland: 19k.

See also

Notes

{{reflist|group=nb|30em}}

References

{{reflist|colwidth=30em}}