Would question the number of native speakers of Maori there. There would be certainly that number of people who can speak the language to some degree but not to native speaker level.
NOTE: 12 percent of Hawaiian words are simply loanwords from English. And Hawaiian Creole only has 13 percent of its words as loanwords. (to put this into perspective, 1 in every 9 Hawaiian words is a loan from Engish, and 1 in every 7.5 words is a loan from any language!)
Just out of curiosity, how many people in the US have Spanish as their native language? I'm just counting up the US and Canada for native English speakers, and if I'm counting right, that means almost a third of Americans don't use English as their first language. It's interesting - I never realized it was that many people.
There's a very large portion of Canadians who don't speak English as a first language. Many speak French, and then there are immigrants speaking a variety of others on top of that.
Cool quiz. From Wikipedia: Perhaps one million people now use Tok Pisin [Papua New Guinea's most widely spoken language] as a primary language, but, confusingly, elsewhere I've seen only 120,000 native speakers claimed.
That's right. Bahasa Indonesia was nobody's first language when it became lingua franca in the Dutch East Indies, the legacy of bureaucracy, print, other media, and schools have changed that. I wonder if that's happened in PNG as well.
I spelled it Yaruba and didn't get it, not trying a respelling, figuring it was probably spelled correctly and just too obscure. Maybe I should stick to geography and steer clear of language, LOL.
As of 2016 there are nearly 600,000 native Mandarin speakers in Australia alone. There's about another 50,000 Mandarin speakers in New Zealand and a few hundred in Fiji, and probably some more throughout the rest of Oceania. Samoan furthermore is spoken by about 350,000 within New Zealand and Samoa (excluding American Samoa), and there's probably more speakers in Australia, but then Wikipedia says 350k-450k for Fijian which is lowball listed here at 339k. I checked some other immigrant languages, Arabic and Cantonese are both low 300ks, so no need to worry about them.
I tried Swahili, Zulu, Xhosa, Igbo, Afrikaans, thought of Amharic but dismissed it for some reason (perhaps it came to mind when working on another continent) and well, French..
Is a Wikipedia page quoting an 11-year-old source the best possible source for this quiz? For starters the information is certainly wrong for Oceania in 2018, but I suspect was wrong in 2007 as well. Certainly now Mandarin, but probably also Arabic, Cantonese, Vietnamese and Italian all have numbers of native speakers greater than Maori, according to the 2016 Australian census and extrapolating from the 2013 NZ census (also NZ has about 40,000-50,000 each of Mandarin and Cantonese speakers to add to the Australian figures).
The Wikipedia article doesn't seem to have all the information that this quiz is supposedly based on, such as the guess that 150000 people speak Maori as a first language, or the guess that the number of native speakers of Samoan is less than that.
http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/MediaRealesesByCatalogue/05DEE7DFCA9C2E00CA25814800090FB2?OpenDocument
http://www.stats.govt.nz/Census/2013-census/profile-and-summary-reports/quickstats-culture-identity/languages.aspx
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Languages_of_New_Zealand
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_in_Fiji
also the definition of native language
Quizmaster did the best he/she could with the data given, but i reckon the data is bunk
I got 5/5 of europe and asia. 4/5 of north america and oceania, and 2/5 of africa and south america. Nice spread, in pairs haha