Skip to main content
✦Factcovery
FactsTopics
Home/Facts/Catalan Is The Only Official Language Of Andorra
Andorra

Catalan Is The Only Official Language Of Andorra

Despite being bordered by Spanish and French-speaking nations, Andorra staunchly maintains Catalan as its sole official language. It is the everyday language of government, education, and media, reflecting the country's unique cultural identity and heritage.

Source

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Languages_of_Andorra

Details

Published
March 30, 2026
views
131
AndorraCultureLanguageEuropeCatalanOfficial LanguageIdentity

Related Facts

Weird125 views

The Word 'Trivia' Comes from Latin for 'Three Roads'

In Latin, 'trivium' (tri + via = three + road) referred to the junction where three roads met — a crossroads or small public square where people gathered to gossip and exchange minor information. From this, 'trivialis' came to mean 'commonplace, found everywhere'. In the medieval curriculum, 'trivium' also named the three foundational liberal arts: grammar, rhetoric, and logic.

Read more
Weird90 views

'Stewardesses' Is the Longest Word Typeable with Only the Left Hand

On a standard QWERTY keyboard, all 12 letters of 'stewardesses' (S-T-E-W-A-R-D-E-S-S-E-S) are located on the left side. This makes it the longest common English word typeable with the left hand alone. The longest right-hand-only word is 'lollipop' at 8 letters.

Read more
Weird44 views

The '@' Symbol Has Different Names in Every Language

While English calls it the 'at sign', other languages gave it vivid nicknames: Italian and French call it 'snail' (chiocciola/escargot), Dutch and German say 'monkey tail' (aapstaart/Klammeraffe), Finnish and Swedish call it 'elephant trunk' (snabel-a), Russian uses 'dog' (sobaka), and Greek says 'little duck' (papaki).

Read more
Weird48 views

The # Symbol Is Officially Called an 'Octothorpe'

The '#' symbol's formal name is 'octothorpe' — 'octo' referring to its 8 line endpoints. It is also known as 'hash', 'pound sign', and 'number sign'. Other languages have creative names for it: 'snail' in Italian, 'monkey tail' in Dutch, 'elephant trunk' in Finnish, and 'little duck' in Greek. Twitter popularized 'hashtag' after 2007.

Read more

✦ Factcovery

TopicsAboutPrivacyContact

© 2026 Factcovery. All rights reserved.