There are more than 6700 living languages in the world today. Due to the ease with which people can travel from one part of the world to another (often in a matter of hours), speakers of thousands of different languages reach the shores of the United States each year.
The languages we interpret in the U.S. include (but not limited to) those itemized in the list below.
|
Arabic |
Farsi (Persian) |
Kurdish |
Samoan |
|
Amharic |
French |
Nuer |
Serbian |
|
Albanian |
Finnish |
Lao |
Slovak |
|
Armenian |
German |
Latvian (Czech) |
Somali |
|
Bosnian |
Guajarati |
Lithuanian |
Spanish |
|
Bulgarian |
Greek |
Ilocano |
Sudanese |
|
Cambodian |
Hindi |
Marshallese |
Swahili |
|
Chinese Cantonese |
Hmong |
Mien |
Swedish |
|
Chinese Mandarin |
Hungarian |
Norwegian |
Tagalog |
|
Croatian |
Hebrew |
Oromo |
Tigrinya |
|
Czechoslovakian |
Indonesian |
Polish |
Dinka |
|
Danish Italian |
Portuguese |
Thai |
Dutch |
|
Japanese |
Punjabi |
Tongan |
|
|
Khmer |
Romanian |
Ukrainian |
|
|
Korean |
Russian |
Vietnamese |
|