Your Answer ▼ The given charts are comparing the percentages of British students who are able to speak languages other than English in 2000 and 2010. It does not show a noticeable difference between what languages they speak other than English, however, we can assume that British students speak more than one language in 2010 compared to ten years ago. As we discuss about the first graph which is for 2000, students who speak English and Spanish are thirty percent of all which was the most. Following Spanish only, students who cannot speak no other language are twenty percent, and who speak two other languages are only ten percent, which means tmost of students normally speak one other language and the number of who only speak English is bigger than who speak more than two languages. In terms of the second chart shows of 2010, the students tend to learn Spanish or another language than French. Also, we easily assume that they tend to learn other than one language as the proportion of no other language got less from twenty to ten, that of two ther languages got more from ten to fifteen. In conclusion, the charts shows British students tend to speak other languages and what other languages British studnets would like to learn comparing the graphs of 2000 and 2010. |