What’s the language most often spoken in Belize? Can I get by if I just speak English?
Boris Mannsfeld - Boris Mannsfeld & Associates
In Belize, when you get close to the northern or western borders of Guatemala and Mexico, you will find more people who speak Spanish.
You can get by in the whole country with just English.
Posted December 1, 2014
Christian Burn
Posted December 2, 2014
Shannon Davies - El Rey Hotel / Belize Travel Services
Posted April 2, 2015
Phil Hahn - Carmelita Gardens
The Lingua Franca in Belize is Creole so native Belizeans all speak Creole. It is like English pidgin language. It is kind of hard to adapt to, but once you’ve heard it enough and you dissect it, you start to understand it. I can hear it and for the most part understand it, too, but...
The Lingua Franca in Belize is Creole so native Belizeans all speak Creole. It is like English pidgin language. It is kind of hard to adapt to, but once you’ve heard it enough and you dissect it, you start to understand it. I can hear it and for the most part understand it, too, but it’s very difficult for me to get my lips to form the words.
The second language of Belize is Spanish, especially around the border of Mexico and Guatemala. In these areas, you’re going to find a lot of Spanish speakers. In the islands, there is not so much Spanish, but you’ll find English and Creole. The native Belizeans, the ones that do not speak English or just a very little English, are going to be first or second-generation immigrants who came from Guatemala or El Salvador.
Belize Creole is like Jamaican Creole; it’s similar to that but it is unique to Belize. Belize Creole is different than any other Creole. Most Americans would think of Creole as the Creole spoken in New Orleans, but that’s French Creole. Here in Belize, the Creole is like an English dialect. They use a lot in idioms. If you don’t understand the culture, you won’t understand what they are saying. It’s not because you can’t understand the different syllables; it’s just that you don’t know what the words mean.
For example, if you and I are sitting at a dinner and I called to you and said, “Hey, Blue…” “blue means that you are sad and blue. “Blue” comes from a type of fly that will go and defecate in somebody’s meal and ruins it. So when someone calls you “blue”, he or she is “dissing” on you. If you don’t know the history of the words, you wouldn’t know what they are talking about. That’s one of the reasons why Creole is hard to understand; it is composed of proverbs and idioms.
Native Belizeans can switch on and off. They can speak English and people understand them fine, but then if there are three of you standing there with you as a foreigner and two Belizeans, they will talk to you in very clear English and they will turn to each other and speak Creole.
Posted May 15, 2015
Dora Guerra - Atlantic International Bank
Belize is the only Central American country whose main language is English. We also speak Spanish and “Creole,” which is a very popular dialect of English here in Belize.
Quite simply, you can most definitely get by with just English in Belize. It’s one of the best reasons to retire here, as opposed to the country of Panama or Medellin in Colombia, especially if you’re main language is English.
(Signs in Creole...
Belize is the only Central American country whose main language is English. We also speak Spanish and “Creole,” which is a very popular dialect of English here in Belize.
Quite simply, you can most definitely get by with just English in Belize. It’s one of the best reasons to retire here, as opposed to the country of Panama or Medellin in Colombia, especially if you’re main language is English.
(Signs in Creole and English on Caye Cauker, Belize, pictured.)
Posted May 15, 2015
Irma Quiroz-Yuque - Belize Vacation Homes
Sometimes it’s a little harder to understand them because of...
Sometimes it’s a little harder to understand them because of their accents but you know they pretty much all understand English, and if somebody doesn’t, their children all speak English because they’re going to school here. In this case, they’ll go to their child and say, “Hey, come translate for me,” and so you don’t need any other language
Having pretty much everyone speak English is one of the things that caused us to decide to retire here. It helps the retirees. In the alternative, if I were to retire, let’s say for example, somewhere in Ecuador, you really need Spanish because you will need to talk to the local people and in case of an emergency or whatever it may be, I would need to know that language. Here, you don’t have that issue. All medical personnel speak English, all police and firemen speak English, and English is the main language here.
Posted October 23, 2015
Leon Hooker
Posted December 5, 2015
Zach Smith - Anywhere
Posted January 30, 2018