Spanish Speakers in the United States The United States is not only the land of businesses and success but also home to diversity. Spanish is the second most spoken language in the world, with 41 million people who speak Spanish at home. Of course, Spanish is not the only secondary language in the US: Native American languages, French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Hawaiian and some varieties of Chinese are also widely spoken.
Spanish Native Speakers came way back since 1493 and today is native language of 13% of United States residents. California, Texas and Florida make up 55% of the Hispanic population in the United States. Followed by New Mexico, California , Arizona, Florida, Nevada, New York, New Jersey, Illinois and Colorado.
For those who haven’t connected the dots, there are a few States that have Spanish name origins, such as California, Montana, Colorado and Florida. Even a good amount of cities were influenced like the very well-known Los Angeles City (the angels). This city was originally a pueblo founded and named by the Spanish with the full name of: “El