No.
Languages:German (official nationwide) 88.6%, Turkish 2.3%, Serbian 2.2%, Croatian (official in Burgenland) 1.6%, other (includes Slovene,official in Carinthia, and Hungarian, official in Burgenland) 5.3% (2001 census)
No, Austria is not unilingual. German is the official language of Austria, but there are also regional languages spoken such as Croatian, Hungarian, and Slovene in some areas.
Iceland is considered unilingual as the vast majority of the population speaks Icelandic as their primary language.
The word itself means one tongue (language). If you only speak English, you are unilingual. If you speak two, you are bilingual and if you speak several, you are multilingual.
Japan is an example of a country that is predominantly unilingual, with Japanese being the official and most widely spoken language.
A monolingual person.
Speaking only one language is called monolingualism.
Austria
There are probably several in the world, but these countries come to mind: Austria North Korea South Korea
Iceland is considered unilingual as the vast majority of the population speaks Icelandic as their primary language.
It shouldn't.
The word itself means one tongue (language). If you only speak English, you are unilingual. If you speak two, you are bilingual and if you speak several, you are multilingual.
Probably Saskatchewan or Manitoba.
Japan is an example of a country that is predominantly unilingual, with Japanese being the official and most widely spoken language.
France, Belgium, and HungaryAnswer:The previous answer is wrong. There are no unilingual countries in Europe. Every country has speakers of more than 1 language.
No in the UK English, Welsh and Gaelic are all used.
A monolingual person.
I believe that word is, "unilingual", which literally means, "One tongue".
No, there was a Serbocrotian language (spoken in Croatia, Serbia, Bosnia and Montenegro), Slovenian language, and Macedonian language.