English is at least one of the official languages of all five of the unincorporated U.S. territories, and it is the official language of the following 28 U.S. states:
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii (also Hawaiian)
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Mississippi
Montana
Nebraska
North Dakota
Oklahoma
South Dakota
Tennessee
Utah
Virginia
Wyoming
No bill ever made English the official language of the United States. The US does not have an official language.
The United States does not have an official language. Therefore, English was never the official language of the United States.
There is no official language in the United States; English is the de facto language.
The official language of the United States is not specified at the federal level. English is the most widely spoken language, but there is no official language designated by law. Many states have adopted English as their official language, but there is no universal rule for the entire country.
Yes it is. Wrong. No it certainly is not. While English may be the defacto language of the United States, there is no officially recognized language on the federal level. However, 28 states have passed laws or mandates making English the official language in their states. Actually, English is the official language of 31 states as of today, and three more are greatly considering it (Minnesota, Pennsylvania, and Texas I believe, and I am sure there are more). It has official status in the country, but not at a national level.
The United States does not have an official language at the federal level. English is the most widely spoken language, but there is no law designating it as the official language.
The United States does not have an official language at the federal level. English is the most widely spoken language and is often used for official government business, but there is no official designation.
english The US does not have an official language. English is the de facto language, official languages of 30 states, and spoken by about 95% of the population.
55 countries have English as their official language. There are upwards of thirty five countries that recognize English as an official language, including Bermuda, Canada, Kenya and Uganda. Surprisingly enough, the United States of America does not have an official language.
The United States does not have any official languages at the federal level. English is the most widely spoken language and is the unofficial national language, but there is no official designation.
It's actually a myth that the United States once was close to voting German as its official language; the United States does not now, nor has it ever, had an official language. English is used as the de facto official language, but there is in fact no legally official language in the United States. Several states have official languages. Louisiana has English and French; New Mexico has English and Spanish; Hawai'i has English and Hawai'ian; etc. If, theoretically, German or any other language were voted as the official language, in all likelihood there would be little change to how things are done already because English is so widely spoken.
If you mean the United States, it has no official language, but English is most widely spoken.