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What's
the language that the most Americans speak after English? As you'd
probably guess, the second-most common language spoken in the U.S. is
Spanish. But if you look at the most common languages after English and Spanish, the results get a little more surprising, especially when you parse them by state.
Using data from the American Community Survey
conducted by the Census Bureau, where respondents were asked to list
the languages spoken in their household, Ben Blatt from Slate made maps
of the most commonly spoken language in each state.
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Spanish
blankets the country except for two French areas: in a handful of
states near the Canadian border and Louisiana. Yupik, a Native American
language, is the second-most spoken language in Alaska, and Tagalog is
popular in Hawaii thanks to the large Filipino population. Now keep your
eye on that German-speaking pocket in North Dakota.
If
we remove Spanish from the mix, we start to see some truly surprising
trends. All sorts of ethnic, immigration, and cultural patterns start to
reveal themselves. You can see more Native American languages like
Navajo and Dakota, lots of Korean and Vietnamese states, and plenty of
our original Colonial Era holdouts: Italian, French, Portuguese. Then
there are some outliers like Russian, Arabic, Hmong, and French Creole.
And I don't think I would have guessed Tagalog would be the third-most
spoken language in California.
The
most shocking fact to me was seeing all the households that speak
German—I can't say it's a language I hear hardly anywhere except when I
travel to Europe. However, the prevalence of all those German-speaking
states doesn't mean that German is the third most-spoken language by
Americans. The third-most spoken language in the U.S. overall? Chinese.
Check out the story for plenty more language-based maps. [Slate]
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