Data on language spoken at home were derived from answers to the 2006 American Community Survey Questions 13a and 13b. These questions were asked only of persons 5 years of age and older. Instructions mailed with the American Community Survey questionnaire instructed respondents to mark "Yes" on Question 13a if they sometimes or always spoke a language other than English at home, and "No" if a language was spoken only at school - or if speaking was limited to a few expressions or slang. For Question 13b, respondents printed the name of the non-English language they spoke at home. If the person spoke more than one non-English language, they reported the language spoken most often. If the language spoken most frequently could not be determined, the respondent reported the language learned first.
Questions 13a and 13b referred to languages spoken at home in an effort to measure the current use of languages other than English. This category excluded respondents who spoke a language other than English exclusively outside of the home.
Most respondents who reported speaking a language other than English also spoke English. The questions did not permit a determination of the primary language of persons who spoke both English and another language.
An automated computer system coded write-in responses to Question 13b into more than 380 detailed language categories. This automated procedure compared write-in responses with a master computer code list - which contained approximately 55,000 previously coded language names and variants - and then assigned a detailed language category to each write-in response. The computerized matching assured that identical alphabetic entries received the same code. Clerical coding categorized any write-in responses that did not match the computer dictionary. When multiple languages other than English were specified, only the first was coded.
The write-in responses represented the names people used for languages they spoke. They may not have matched the names or categories used by professional linguists. The categories used were sometimes geographic and sometimes linguistic. The following table provides an illustration of the content of the classification schemes used to present language data.
Four and Thirty-Nine Group Classifications of Languages Spoken at Home with Illustrative Examples
Four-Group Classification |
Thirty-nine Group Classification |
Examples |
Spanish |
Spanish or Spanish Creole |
Spanish, Ladino, Pachuco |
Other Indo-European languages |
French |
French, Cajun, Patois |
French Creole |
Haitian Creole |
Italian |
Italian |
Portuguese or Portuguese Creole |
Portuguese, Papia Mentae |
German |
German, Luxembourgian |
Yiddish |
Yiddish |
Other West Germanic languages |
Dutch, Pennsylvania Dutch, Afrikaans |
Scandinavian languages |
Danish, Norwegian, Swedish |
Greek |
Greek |
Russian |
Russian |
Polish |
Polish |
Serbo-Croatian |
Serbo-Croatian, Croatian, Serbian |
Other Slavic languages |
Czech, Slovak, Ukrainian |
Armenian |
Armenian |
Persian |
Persian |
Gujarathi |
Gujarathi |
Hindi |
Hindi |
Urdu |
Urdu |
Other Indic languages |
Bengali, Marathi, Punjabi, Romany |
Other Indo-European languages |
Albanian, Gaelic, Lithuanian,Rumanian |
Asian and Pacific Island languages |
Chinese |
Cantonese, Formosan, Mandarin |
Japanese |
Japanese |
Korean |
Korean |
Mon-Khmer, Cambodian |
Mon-Khmer, Cambodian |
Hmong |
Hmong |
Thai |
Thai |
Laotian |
Laotian |
Vietnamese |
Vietnamese |
Other Asian languages |
Dravidian languages (Malayalam, Telugu, Tamil),Turkish |
Tagalog |
Tagalog |
Other Pacific Island languages |
Chamorro, Hawaiian, Ilocano, Indonesian, Samoan |
All other languages |
Navajo |
Navajo |
Other Native North American languages |
Apache, Cherokee, Dakota, Pima, Yupik |
Hungarian |
Hungarian |
Arabic |
Arabic |
Hebrew |
Hebrew |
African languages |
Amharic, Ibo, Twi, Yoruba, Bantu, Swahili, Somali |
Other and unspecified languages |
Syriac, Finnish, Other languages of the Americas, not reported |