List of multilingual countries and regions


This is an incomplete list of areas with either multilingualism at the community level or at the personal level.
There is a distinction between social and personal bilingualism. Many countries, such as Belarus, Belgium, Canada, India, Ireland, South Africa and Switzerland, which are officially multilingual, may have many monolinguals in their population. Officially monolingual countries, on the other hand, such as France, can have sizable multilingual populations. Some countries have official languages but also have regional and local official languages, notably Brazil, China, Indonesia, Mexico, Russia, Spain and Taiwan.

Africa

Central Africa

Caribbean

English is co-official in San Andres and Providencia.

Central Asia

[Kazakhstan]

and Russian both have official status—Kazakh as the "state" language and Russian as "officially used on equal grounds along with the Kazak language".
Kazakhstan is taking its huge step into multilingualism by accepting the trilingualism policy and making changes in law. The ex-president Nursultan Nazarbaev noted that "The multinationality and multilingualism are one of the values and the main feature of our state."Dariga Nazarbayeva, deputy prime minister and daughter of the country’s president, in February said that Kazakh children should learn Chinese in addition to Kazakh, Russian and English. “China is our friend, our trading partner and the biggest investor in the economy of our country,” she said. “In the near future, we all need to know Chinese.”

[Kyrgyzstan]

is the state language and Russian "used in the capacity of an official language".

[Tajikistan]

as the state language and Russian, designated as language of interethnic communication in the constitution, are widely spoken.

[Uzbekistan]

In Uzbekistan, Uzbek, Tajik, and Russian are all widely spoken. Use of Russian is foreseen for notarized documents and civic records
[Karakalpakstan]
In the autonomous Karakalpakstan, Karakalpak language is an official one, alongside Uzbek.

East Asia

Central Europe