some poster i know actually said that this may be the peak of spanish speakers in the current day or the 2030s. As more kids of hispanic immigrants are born, the less likely it’ll be that they speak spanish (the same thing that happened to italian and german decades ago). Or what’s more likely to happen – a rise in spanglish which many people speak
[deleted] on
[deleted]
Emz423 on
The French spoken in the mid-Atlantic region has to be Haitian Creole, no?
Psychoceramicist on
No Romanians, I guess
omojave on
first time seeing the Portuguese spoken a lot in some part of the US. why exactly is that?
Brief-Spirit-4268 on
I see a lot of 1-9% French in New York City and Florida, I wonder if they’re classifying Haitian Creole as French
CosciaDiPollo972 on
So basically if you go to Texas or California you can just get by with Spanish ?
KotoshiKaizen on
I really doubt the French speakers are that prevalent in Louisiana. Above 1 percent, sure. There are more Spanish speakers than French speakers there now.
bschmalhofer on
I think that French in Louisiana is way overstated.
Ok-Wonder-9788 on
Little Portugal aka Southeast Massachusetts
FireUniverse1162 on
I knew people in Bristol county MA spoke Portuguese, but not that much.
bloodrider1914 on
Thought this was literally the percentage of Latin speakers in the US lol
Connect_Progress7862 on
Nice to see Portuguese on there. I guess all the Italians are too assimilated.
NeoThorrus on
Where is Puerto Rico ?
Ana_Na_Moose on
It surprises me that Italian speakers outnumber Spanish speakers anywhere in this country
94_stones on
FYI Most of that “Italian” is actually Sicilian or Neapolitan. This map also seems to classify both Haitian Creole and Cajun as “French.” That’s probably justifiable for the latter, I’ve heard plenty of people speakers refer to Cajun as “French.” But it doesn’t really make sense for Haitian Creole.
Desperate_Return_142 on
Es interesante que Idaho tiene más hispanohablantes que Nevada, cuando Nevada tiene la población más latina entre ellos.
Blerancourt on
I have never met a French-speaking person in northern Vermont, even in the border towns.
RoyalPeacock19 on
Would be nice if they used the same scale, tbh.
GSilky on
There’s Adams County Colorado! Curious what year this is from, because it would be pretty dark when I was growing up there.
LupusDeusMagnus on
Source?
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some poster i know actually said that this may be the peak of spanish speakers in the current day or the 2030s. As more kids of hispanic immigrants are born, the less likely it’ll be that they speak spanish (the same thing that happened to italian and german decades ago). Or what’s more likely to happen – a rise in spanglish which many people speak
[deleted]
The French spoken in the mid-Atlantic region has to be Haitian Creole, no?
No Romanians, I guess
first time seeing the Portuguese spoken a lot in some part of the US. why exactly is that?
I see a lot of 1-9% French in New York City and Florida, I wonder if they’re classifying Haitian Creole as French
So basically if you go to Texas or California you can just get by with Spanish ?
I really doubt the French speakers are that prevalent in Louisiana. Above 1 percent, sure. There are more Spanish speakers than French speakers there now.
I think that French in Louisiana is way overstated.
Little Portugal aka Southeast Massachusetts
I knew people in Bristol county MA spoke Portuguese, but not that much.
Thought this was literally the percentage of Latin speakers in the US lol
Nice to see Portuguese on there. I guess all the Italians are too assimilated.
Where is Puerto Rico ?
It surprises me that Italian speakers outnumber Spanish speakers anywhere in this country
FYI Most of that “Italian” is actually Sicilian or Neapolitan. This map also seems to classify both Haitian Creole and Cajun as “French.” That’s probably justifiable for the latter, I’ve heard plenty of people speakers refer to Cajun as “French.” But it doesn’t really make sense for Haitian Creole.
Es interesante que Idaho tiene más hispanohablantes que Nevada, cuando Nevada tiene la población más latina entre ellos.
I have never met a French-speaking person in northern Vermont, even in the border towns.
Would be nice if they used the same scale, tbh.
There’s Adams County Colorado! Curious what year this is from, because it would be pretty dark when I was growing up there.
Source?