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The following is a list of the nine sovereign states and one territory where Portuguese is an official language.
![image](https://www.wikiquery.en-us.nina.az/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cud2lraXF1ZXJ5LmVuLXVzLm5pbmEuYXovaW1hZ2UvYUhSMGNITTZMeTkxY0d4dllXUXVkMmxyYVcxbFpHbGhMbTl5Wnk5M2FXdHBjR1ZrYVdFdlkyOXRiVzl1Y3k5MGFIVnRZaTgwTHpSaEwwUmxkR0ZwYkdWa1gxTldSMTl0WVhCZmIyWmZkR2hsWDB4MWMyOXdhRzl1WlY5M2IzSnNaQzV6ZG1jdk16TXdjSGd0UkdWMFlXbHNaV1JmVTFaSFgyMWhjRjl2Wmw5MGFHVmZUSFZ6YjNCb2IyNWxYM2R2Y214a0xuTjJaeTV3Ym1jPS5wbmc=.png)
Native language and official
Official and administrative language
Sovereign states
Angola
Brazil (see Brazilian Portuguese)
Cape Verde
Timor-Leste (co-official with Tetum; 51,800 L1 speakers as of 2007)
Equatorial Guinea (co-official with Spanish and French)
Guinea-Bissau
Mozambique
Portugal
São Tomé and Príncipe
Territory
See also
- Community of Portuguese Language Countries (CPLP)
- Geographical distribution of Portuguese speakers
- List of international organisations which have Portuguese as an official language
- Portuguese-speaking African countries (PALOP)
- Portuguese-based creole languages
- Latin America
- Latin Europe
- World Portuguese Language Day
References
- "East Timor drowns in language soup". Reuters. 22 April 2007.
- "Search results". www.google.com. []