The two pie charts show changes in the proportion of British students who were able to speak other foreign languages between 2000 and 2010. Overall, Spanish, an unspecified language, and two other languages exhibited increases, albeit to varying degrees, while the reverse was true for the other remaining languages. It is also clear that Spanish was the most common language in both years.
Focusing on the increases first, 30% of students could speak in Spanish, with this being the largest proportion on the chart in 2000, after which it increased noticeably by 5%. The least popular languages—two other languages—became popular as well, as the percentage reached 15% in 2010 from an initial 10%. Lastly, the figure for an unspecified language was 20% in 2010, up from just 15% in 2000.
On the other hand, other remaining languages bucked the trend. 10% of students did not know other languages in 2010, which fell from just 20% in 2000, making it the least popular choice on the chart. While German remained intact, the figure for French decreased from a staggering 15% to just 10% in 2010.
estimate score?
https://t.me/akbarov_0fficial
Focusing on the increases first, 30% of students could speak in Spanish, with this being the largest proportion on the chart in 2000, after which it increased noticeably by 5%. The least popular languages—two other languages—became popular as well, as the percentage reached 15% in 2010 from an initial 10%. Lastly, the figure for an unspecified language was 20% in 2010, up from just 15% in 2000.
On the other hand, other remaining languages bucked the trend. 10% of students did not know other languages in 2010, which fell from just 20% in 2000, making it the least popular choice on the chart. While German remained intact, the figure for French decreased from a staggering 15% to just 10% in 2010.
estimate score?
https://t.me/akbarov_0fficial