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Italian-speaking Switzerland

Languages of Switzerland
Switzerland Linguistic EN.png
Official languages German, French, Italian
National languages
Vernaculars Swiss German, Swiss French, Swiss Italian, Arpitan, Lombard, Walser German
Main immigrant languages
Sign languages Swiss German Sign Language, French Sign Language, Italian Sign Language
Common keyboard layouts
Source FSO

The four national languages of Switzerland are German, French, Italian and Romansh. All but Romansh maintain equal status as official languages at the national level within the Federal Administration of the Swiss Confederation.

In 2015, 63.0% native speakers of German (of which 59.5% speak Swiss German and 10.4% Standard German at home); 22.7% French (mostly Swiss French, but including some Arpitan dialects); 8.4% Italian (mostly Swiss Italian, but including Lombard dialects); and 0.6% Romansh.

The German region (Deutschschweiz) is roughly in the east, north and center; the French part (la Romandie) in the west and the Italian area (Svizzera italiana) in the south. There remains a small Romansh-speaking native population in Graubünden in the east. The cantons of Fribourg, Bern and Valais are officially bilingual; the canton of Graubünden is officially trilingual.

The main languages of Swiss residents from 1950 to 2015, in percentages, were as follows:

In 2012, for the first time, respondents could indicate more than one language, causing the percentages to exceed 100%.

The German-speaking part of Switzerland (German: Deutschschweiz, French: Suisse alémanique, Italian: Svizzera tedesca, Romansh: Svizra tudestga) comprises about 65% of Switzerland (North Western Switzerland, Eastern Switzerland, Central Switzerland, most of the Swiss Plateau and the greater part of the Swiss Alps).


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