Although many people have studied Latin, I don't believe any country uses it for day-to-day communication. Many countries have either majority or minority populations speaking languages derived from Latin, such as Italian, French, Spanish, Romanian, Romanisch, and Portuguese.
For what it's worth, I heard there is a radio station in Northern Europe (Finalnd?) that announces the news in Latin once a day.
No countries current speak Latin. While the language may be used in law or religion or the sciences or taught in classrooms, it is not actually an official language of any country.
Latin is a dead language, and it is only spoken as a second language by a few hundred thousand people in the world, but it is also an official language of Vatican City.
There is none.
No country speaks Latin any longer as it is a dead language. However, a small number of people in northern Italy, eastern Switzerland and western Austria speak Helvetian, which is a mixture of languages including Latin. The military in Switzerland (if you can call it that) and in Austria speak German, but different dialects.
If you are including the Caribbean nations, Jamaica.
Latin is spoken all over the world, no matter if it's its national language or not. Latin is absolutely everywhere. But, the only country that has Latin as its national language is the Vatican City.However, there is no place in the world where Latin is spoken as a first language.
Guatemala I would say mexico spanish since most latin american countries copy them.
Pig Latin is spoken by juveniles.
I don't know, which country speaks american...-_-'
Where Words Fail Music Speaks
Because no one uses it in everyday language. It's like latin. It has specific uses , but no country speaks it.
Dinkland speaks dink
Nobody speaks Latin as a native language. It is a dead language.
Switzerland is a country that speaks both German and French.