LANGUAGE SPOKEN AT HOME (U.S. CENSUS)

'Language Spoken at Home' is a data set published by the United States Census Bureau on languages in the United States. In 2000 and 1990 it was a part of Summary File 3, collected from the long-form questionnaire which was distributed to 1 out of 6 households. The data set by governments and other organizations in determining which languages to use in a specific geographic area, for instance in voting machines, literature for voters, and material for public libraries.
The published data are for 30 languages, chosen for their nationwide distribution, and 10 language groupings (see list below). Data from households which report languages other than the 30 are reported under the language groupings. Thus, languages which are widespread in certain areas of the country but not nationally get put together, even in block level data. Albanian, Lithuanian, and Welsh are simply "Other Indo-European languages," Yoruba and Somali are simply "African languages," and Indonesian and Syriac are simply "Other Asian languages." Several locally very well-represented languages, such as Punjabi and Pennsylvania German, are collated into smaller groupings. Native North American languages besides Navajo are also collated, though they are reported on several geographic levels in another data set.

Contents
Languages and language groupings
See also

Languages and language groupings


'Language Spoken at Home (U.S. Census 2000) Summary'
English only 82.105%
Spanish 10.710%
Chinese (all spoken varieties incl.) 0.78%
French (incl. Patois, Cajun) 0.627%
German 0.527%
Tagalog 0.467%
Vietnamese 0.385%
Italian 0.384%
Korean 0.341%
Russian 0.269%
Polish 0.254%
Arabic 0.234%
Portuguese or Portuguese Creole 0.215%
Japanese 0.182%
French Creole 0.173%
Other Indic languages 0.167%
African languages 0.160%
Other Asian languages 0.152%
Greek 0.139%
Other Indo-European languages 0.125%
Hindi 0.121%
Other Austronesian languages 0.120%
Persian0.119%
Other Slavic languages 0.115%
Urdu 0.100%
Dutch (and Afrikaans) 0.096%
Gujarati 0.090%
Serbo-Croatian 0.089%
Other Native American languages 0.078%
Armenian 0.077%
Hebrew 0.074%
Mon, Khmer 0.069%
Yiddish 0.068%
Navajo 0.068%
Hmong 0.064%
North Germanic languages 0.062%
Lao 0.057%
Thai 0.046%
Hungarian 0.045%
All other and unspecified 0.055%


English

Spanish or Spanish Creole

French (incl. Patois, Cajun)

Italian

Romanian

Portuguese or Portuguese Creole

German

Yiddish

Dutch (and Afrikaans) (West Germanic languages)

★ Scandinavian languages

Greek

Russian

Polish

Serbo-Croatian

★ Other Slavic languages (besides Russian, Polish, and Serbo-Croatian)

Armenian

Persian

Telugu

Gujarati

Hindi

Urdu

Marathi

★ Other Indic languages (besides Telugu, Gujarati, Hindi, Urdu and Marathi)

★ Other Indo-European languages (besides the above 17 languages and 3 groupings)

Chinese

Japanese

Korean

Mon-Khmer, Cambodian

★ Miao, Hmong

★ Filipino, (including Tagalog and Ilocano)

Thai

Laotian

Vietnamese

★ Other Asian languages (besides the above 9 languages)

Navajo

★ Other Native North American languages

Hungarian

Arabic

Hebrew

African languages

★ Other and unspecified languages

See also



Languages in the United States

Language Use (Official US Census, 2000)

Ancestry (United States Census)

Ethnicity (United States Census)

Race (United States Census)

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves