This is a list of languages by total number of speakers.
It is difficult to define what constitutes a language as opposed to a dialect. For example, Chinese and Arabic are sometimes considered single languages, but each includes several mutually unintelligible varieties, and so they are sometimes considered language families instead. Conversely, colloquial registers of Hindi and Urdu are almost completely mutually intelligible, and are sometimes classified as one language, Hindustani. Such rankings should be used with caution, because it is not possible to devise a coherent set of linguistic criteria for distinguishing languages in a dialect continuum.[1]
There is no single criterion for how much knowledge is sufficient to be counted as a second-language speaker. For example, English has about 450 million native speakers but, depending on the criterion chosen, can be said to have as many as two billion speakers.[2]
There are also difficulties in obtaining reliable counts of speakers, which vary over time because of population change and language shift. In some areas, there is no reliable census data, the data is not current, or the census may not record languages spoken, or record them ambiguously. Sometimes speaker populations are exaggerated for political reasons, or speakers of minority languages may be underreported in favor of a national language.[3]
The following languages are listed as having 45 million or more total speakers in the 26th edition of Ethnologue published in 2023.[4] Entries identified by Ethnologue as macrolanguages (such as Arabic, Persian, Malay, Pashto, Sindhi, and Chinese, encompassing all their respective varieties) are not included in this section.
Language | Family | Branch | First-language (L1) speakers |
Second-language (L2) speakers |
Total speakers (L1+L2) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
English (excl. creole languages) |
Indo-European | Germanic | 380 million | 1.077 billion[5] | 1.456 billion |
Mandarin Chinese (incl. Standard Chinese, but excl. other varieties) |
Sino-Tibetan | Sinitic | 939 million | 199 million[6] | 1.138 billion |
Hindi (excl. Urdu, and other languages) |
Indo-European | Indo-Aryan | 345 million | 266 million[7] | 609 million |
Spanish | Indo-European | Romance | 485 million | 74 million[8] | 559 million |
French | Indo-European | Romance | 81 million | 229 million[9] | 310 million |
Modern Standard Arabic (excl. dialects) |
Afro-Asiatic | Semitic | 0[a] | 274 million[11] | 274 million |
Bengali | Indo-European | Indo-Aryan | 234 million | 39 million[12] | 273 million |
Portuguese | Indo-European | Romance | 236 million | 27 million [13] | 264 million |
Russian | Indo-European | Balto-Slavic | 147 million | 108 million[14] | 255 million |
Urdu (excl. Hindi) |
Indo-European | Indo-Aryan | 71 million | 161 million[15] | 232 million |
Indonesian (excl. other Malay) |
Austronesian | Malayo-Polynesian | 44 million | 155 million[16] | 199 million |
Standard German | Indo-European | Germanic | 75 million | 58 million[17] | 133 million |
Japanese | Japonic | — | 123 million | 0.2 million[18] | 123 million |
Nigerian Pidgin | English Creole | Krio | 5 million | 116 million[19] | 121 million |
Egyptian Arabic (excl. other Arabic dialects) |
Afro-Asiatic | Semitic | 77 million | 25 million[20] | 102 million |
Marathi | Indo-European | Indo-Aryan | 83 million | 16 million[21] | 99 million |
Telugu | Dravidian | South-Central | 83 million | 13 million[22] | 96 million |
Turkish | Turkic | Oghuz | 84 million | 6 million[23] | 90 million |
Tamil | Dravidian | Southern | 79 million | 8 million[24] | 87 million |
Yue Chinese (incl. Cantonese) |
Sino-Tibetan | Sinitic | 86 million | 1 million[25] | 87 million |
Vietnamese | Austroasiatic | Vietic | 85 million | 1 million[26] | 86 million |
Wu Chinese (incl. Shanghainese) |
Sino-Tibetan | Sinitic | 83 million | 0.1 million[27] | 83 million |
Tagalog[b] | Austronesian | Malayo-Polynesian | 29 million | 54 million[28] | 83 million |
Korean | Koreanic | — | 82 million | — [29] |
82 million |
Iranian Persian (excl. Dari and Tajik) |
Indo-European | Iranian | 57 million | 21 million[30] | 79 million |
Hausa | Afro-Asiatic | Chadic | 52 million | 27 million[31] | 79 million |
Swahili | Niger–Congo | Bantu | 16 million | 55 million[32] | 72 million |
Javanese | Austronesian | Malayo-Polynesian | — | — [33] |
68 million |
Italian | Indo-European | Romance | 65 million | 3 million[34] | 68 million |
Western Punjabi (excl. Eastern Punjabi) |
Indo-European | Indo-Aryan | — | — [35] |
67 million |
Gujarati | Indo-European | Indo-Aryan | 57 million | 5 million[36] | 62 million |
Thai | Kra–Dai | Zhuang–Tai | 21 million | 40 million[37] | 61 million |
Kannada | Dravidian | Southern | 44 million | 15 million[38] | 59 million |
Amharic | Afro-Asiatic | Semitic | 32 million | 25 million[39] | 58 million |
Bhojpuri | Indo-European | Indo-Aryan | 52 million | 0.2 million[40] | 52 million |
Eastern Punjabi (excl. Western Punjabi) |
Indo-European | Indo-Aryan | 48 million | 4 million[41] | 52 million |
Min Nan Chinese (incl. Hokkien) |
Sino-Tibetan | Sinitic | 50 million | 0.4 million[42] | 50 million |
Jin Chinese | Sino-Tibetan | Sinitic | — | — [43] |
48 million |
Levantine Arabic (excl. other Arabic dialects) |
Afro-Asiatic | Semitic | 47 million | 0.4 million[44] | 48 million |
Yoruba | Niger–Congo | Atlantic–Congo | 44 million | 2 million[45] | 46 million |
The World Factbook, produced by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), estimates the ten most spoken languages (L1 + L2) in 2022 as follows:[46]
Language | Percentage of world population (2022) |
---|---|
English | 18.8% |
Mandarin Chinese | 13.8% |
Hindi | 7.5% |
Spanish | 6.9% |
French | 3.4% |
Arabic | 3.4% |
Bengali | 3.4% |
Russian | 3.2% |
Portuguese | 3.2% |
Urdu | 2.9% |