Which U.S. Presidents Were Multilingual?

  • Jefferson (left), Hoover (center), Buchanan (right)
Jefferson (left), Hoover (center), Buchanan (right)
Credit: UniversalImagesGroup via Getty Images (left), Bettmann via Getty images (center), FineArt/ Alamy Stock Photo (right)

English has always been the dominant language of United States presidents, but many have also spoken other languages. Some presidents were well versed in classical tongues such as Latin and Greek — a standard component of education in colonial America for those who could access it — while others spoke languages such as French, German, and even Mandarin to varying degrees. 

More than half of the 45 people who have served as POTUS (across 47 presidencies) are known to have spoken only one language: English. While determining fluency and proficiency can be difficult, 16 U.S. presidents are considered multilingual, meaning they spoke or competently understood three or more languages. Another five presidents were proficient enough in two languages to be considered bilingual. Here’s the full list of America’s most linguistically gifted commanders in chief.

Multilingual

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John Quincy Adams: English, French, Dutch, German, Latin, Spanish, Greek, Italian, Russian

John Quincy Adams, the sixth president of the United States and also the eldest son of President John Adams, was proficient in many languages. At 10 years old, he accompanied his father to France during the American Revolutionary War. While in Europe, Adams attended schools and became fluent in Dutch, German, and French. He was so skilled at the latter that at age 14, he joined diplomat Francis Dana in Russia as a secretary and translator for the French language commonly spoken by the Russian aristocracy. According to the Adams Presidential Center, the younger Adams also spoke Greek, Italian, Latin, Russian, and Spanish.

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