Most Multilangual country

Yeah i'll talk in african to them from childhood...
retard

French works just as good
I mean Mohammed is the most common (baby) name in Brussels, and soon you will all be French, so might as well practice right?

From personal experience of living there, I can confidently say that Bhutan is the most multilingual country in the world.
Everyone speaks:

>English
While English is the second language of the country, it is one everyone deals with. Most administration (government, businesses, hospitals, etc) happens in English — and not just for foreigners, this includes Bhutanese locals. All of education happens in English, at least from a certain age at some point before high school. The national language is simply a course they have a few times a week. All other classes are in English.
>Dzongkha
The national language.
>local languages
The most common native language is Sharchop, which is spoken by the people in the East of the country, but due to migration to the urban centers, even in the capital Thimphu in Western Bhutan, I would say at least a quarter of the population speaks fluent Sharchop. Many people have picked up this language even if they don't have ethnic roots in the East. Other languages that people often speak at home with their parents are Bumthap and Khengkha.
>Hindi
Almost everyone speaks this at a basic level. Much like we all speak English here on Yas Forums because of the media we consumed as children/teenagers, in Bhutan people grow up with Indian movies, music, etc. so pretty much all of them speak Hindi.
>Nepali
A quarter of the Bhutanese population has Nepali ethnic origins, a migration wave that happened in the 20th century. Recent enough that Nepali is still the first language of many Bhutanese people. A lot of non-ethnic Nepali Bhutanese also speak Nepali just because they are exposed to it so much.

Tibetan also comes to mind, because it is the closest relative to Dzongkha (Dzongkha uses the Tibetan alphabet), but only some people speak a limited amount of Tibetan, not enough for it to be considered as a language widely spoken by Bhutanese people.
Experiencing such a multilingual society was kinda overwhelming. Felt really weird.