South Korea and North Korea have Korean as the principal language.
North and South Korea speak different dialects of the same language: Korean. Otherwise, these countries have NOTHING in common linguistically. They speak languages that are completely unrelated to each other.
Many many countries speak the same language. Here are just a few examples:The U.S. and Canada both speak EnglishFrance and Canada both speak FrenchNorth Korea and South Korea both speak KoreanLebanon and Syria both speak Arabic
Korea is divided into 2 sections. north Korea and south Korea. they speak the same language, Korean, and they have the same ancestors. it was divided after their independence from japan. north Koreans are communists and south Korea's political view is democracy.
Although there might be people in Korea who speak Mandarin, Korean people speak the Korean language. Mandarin is spoken in most of China and also in Taiwan.
The English language is the most prevalent foreign language in Korea because of the strong alliance between Korea and the United States, including the US military presence in Korea. However, the English language is not dominant in Korea, Korean is, and less than 10% of Koreans speak English.
Approximately 0.5% of South Koreans speak Chinese, primarily due to business and trade interactions between South Korea and China. However, the majority of South Koreans do not speak Chinese as their second language.
North Koreans speak Korean. The official language of North Korea is Korean, which is also known as the Pyongyang dialect.
There are a few countries like this:North KoreaSouth Korea (if you don't count Korean Sign Language)Iceland (if you don't count the fact that almost everyone can speak English as a foreign language)Kuwait
Approximately 75 million people worldwide speak Korean as their first language. This number includes people in South Korea, North Korea, and Korean communities in other countries.
In Amsterdam Netherlands we speak Nederlands or more commonly known as Dutch language. Our currency is "the Euro".
They speak the same languages (but different tones)