All the flags and banners of the world have prescribed arrangements. That great mass of fluttering colors in all shapes and sizes and designs is far more meaningful than decorative, for every flag is a communication from one human being or group of people which may be received and responded to by others.
Whitney Smith, Flags Through the Ages and Across the World
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Denmark |
Danish, Faeroese, Greenlandic (an Inuit dialect), small German-speaking minority |
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Djibouti |
Arabic and French (both official), Afar, Somali |
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Dominica |
English (official) and French patois |
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Dominican Republic |
Spanish, English widely spoken |
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East Timor |
Tetun, Indonesian, Portuguese |
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Ecuador |
Spanish (official), Quechua |
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Egypt |
Arabic |
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El Salvador |
Spanish |
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England |
English |
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Equatorial Guinea |
Spanish (official), French (2nd official), pidgin English, Fang, Bubi, Creole |
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Eritrea |
Afar, Bilen, Kunama, Nara, Arabic, Tobedawi, Saho, Tigre, Tigrinya |
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Estonia |
Estonian (official), Russian, Finnish, English |
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Ethiopia |
Amharic (official), English, Orominga, Tigrigna, over 70 languages spoken |
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European Union |
The European Union has eleven official languages. |
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Falkland Islands |
English |
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Faroe Islands |
Faroese, Danish |
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Fiji |
Fijian, Hindustani, English (official) |
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Finland |
Finnish, Swedish (both official); small Sami- (Lapp) and Russian-speaking minorities |
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France |
French, declining regional dialects (Provençal, Breton, Alsatian, Corsican) |
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French Guiana |
French |
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Frence Polynesia |
French |
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Frence Southern and Antarctic Lands (Territories) |
French |