Official multilingualism

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Official multilingualism is the policy adopted by some states of recognizing multiple languages as official and producing all official documents, and handling all correspondence and official dealings, including court procedure, in these languages. It is distinct from personal multilingualism, the capacity of a person to speak several languages.

States with policies of official bilingualism

Afghanistan

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Afghanistan uses Dari (or Afghan Persian) and Pashto as official languages. Many citizens are bilingual. These two languages account for 85% of Afghanis' native tongues.[1][2]

Belarus

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In Belarus, Russian is far more common than Belarusian and Section 17 of the Constitution designates both as official languages.[3]

Burundi

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The official languages of Burundi are the local Kirundi language as well as the colonial French.

Cameroon

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Cameroon is extremely diverse linguistically and uses English and French as official languages.

Canada

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In Canada English and French have special legal status over other languages in Canada’s courts, parliament and administration.[4] At the provincial level, New Brunswick is the only official bilingual province and only Quebec is officially unilingual (French only). In practice, all provinces, including Quebec, offer some bilingual services and some education in both official languages up to the high school level. English and French are official languages in all three territories (because they are federally administered). In addition, Inuktitut is also an official language in Nunavut, and nine aboriginal languages have official status in the Northwest Territories.

Central African Republic

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Out of 120 languages spoken in the Central African Republic, French and the Ngbandi-based creole Sango.

Chad

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Citizens of Chad speak over 120 languages and the standardized Chadian Arabic serves as the lingua franca with colonial language French also being official.

Cyprus

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Island nation of Cyprus has had Greek and Turkish as its languages since the 1960 Constitution (Article 3, section 1). The usage of either language is complicated by the political dispute that lead tot he creation of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus.

Finland

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In Finland, Finnish and Swedish are both considered "national languages". Municipalities of Finland are divided into three categories: unilingual Swedish, unilingual Finnish or bilingual. Finnish is the maternal language of about 90% of the population, and the bilingual or swedophone population is concentrated to the coastal areas of Ostrobothnia and Southwest Finland. The autonomous province of Åland is officially unilingual (Swedish). Both Swedish and Finnish are compulsory school subjects.

Philippines

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The Philippine constitution designates Filipino as the national language and, along with English, as official languages. Spanish was the national and official language of the country for more than three centuries under Spanish colonial rule, and became the lingua franca of the Philippines in the 19th and early 20th centuries. It remained, along with English, as a de facto official language until removed in 1973 by a constitutional change. After a few months it was re-designated an official language by presidential decree and remained official until 1987, when the present Constitution removed its official status. [5][6] Spanish and Arabic are currently designated to be promoted on a voluntary and optional basis.[7]

Some people in native Tagalog areas are bilingual, while in non-Tagalog areas it is common to be multilingual in Filipino, English, and in one or more of the regional language/s, or as in other cases in languages such as Spanish, Min Nan (Hokkien), and Arabic due to factors such as ancestry and religion. Eleven regional languages are recognised by the government as auxiliary official languages in their respective regions, while 90+ other languages and dialects are spoken by various groups.

Officially multilingual

Other

References

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  7. Constitution of the Republic of Philippines Article 14, Sections 6, 7
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