List of languages in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest

The following is a list of languages used in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest since the contest's inception in 2003, which includes the year, country, song and artist through which each language made its debut. There is a rule in place that stipulates that any given song must be sung in one of the national languages of the country it represents. However, it is permissible for a song to contain lyrics in other languages on top of this.

The songs that contained the most languages were the Serbian entry in 2006 and the Albanian entry in 2015, both with eight. The Serbian song, "Učimo strane jezike", actually only contains two lines (found in its chorus) in Serbian, while the rest is sung in the English, French, German, Italian, Spanish, Russian and Japanese languages. Albania's "Dambaje" is sung in Albanian, German, French, Spanish, English, Italian, Slovene & Turkish, the last of which made its debut in Junior Eurovision.

Belarusian, Japanese and Latin have been featured in songs of the Junior contest, but they have never been used in songs of the senior Eurovision Song Contest.

Languages

Order Language First
appearance
Country First performer First song
1 Greek 2003  Greece Nicolas Ganopoulos "Fili gia panta" (Φίλοι για πάντα)
2 Croatian  Croatia Dino Jelusić "Ti si moja prva ljubav"
3 Belarusian  Belarus Volha Satsiuk "Tantsuy" (Танцуй)
4 Latvian  Latvia Dzintars Čīča "Tu esi vasarā"
5 Macedonian  Macedonia Marija and Viktorija "Ti ne me poznavaš" (Ти не ме познаваш)
6 Polish  Poland Kasia Żurawik "Coś mnie nosi"
7 Norwegian  Norway 2U "Sinnsykt gal forelsket"
8 Spanish  Spain Sergio "Desde el cielo"
9 Romanian  Romania Bubu "Tobele sunt viaţa mea"
10 Dutch  Belgium X!NK "De vriendschapsband"
11 English  United Kingdom Tom Morley "My Song for the World"
12 Danish  Denmark Anne Gadegaard "Arabiens drøm"
13 Swedish  Sweden The Honeypies "Stoppa mig"
14 Italian 2004   Switzerland Demis Mirarchi "Birichino"
15 French  France Thomas Pontier "Si on voulait bien"
16 Russian 2005  Russia Vladislav Krutskikh "Doroga k solnstu" (Дорога к солнцу)
17 Montenegrin  Serbia and Montenegro Filip Vučić "Ljubav pa fudbal" (Љубав па фудбал)
18 Portuguese 2006  Portugal Pedro Madeira "Deixa-me sentir"
19 Ukrainian  Ukraine Nazar Slyusarchuk "Khlopchyk Rock 'n' Roll" (Хлопчик рок н рол)
20 Serbian  Serbia Neustrašivi učitelji stranih jezika "Učimo strane jezike" (Учимо стране језике)
21 German
22 Japanese
23 Georgian 2007  Georgia Mari Romelashvili "Odelia Ranuni"
24 Armenian  Armenia Arevik "Erazanq" (Երազանք)
25 Bulgarian  Bulgaria Bon Bon "Bonbolandiya" (Бонболандия)
26 Lithuanian  Lithuania Lina Joy "Kai miestas snaudžia"
27 Imaginary language 2008  Georgia Bzikebi "Bzz.."
28 Maltese 2010  Malta Nicole Azzopardi "Knock Knock!....Boom! Boom!"
29 Azerbaijani 2012  Azerbaijan Omar Sultanov & Suada Alekberova "Girls and Boys (Dünya Sənindir)"
30 Hebrew  Israel Kids.il "Let the Music Win"
31 Albanian  Albania Igzidora Gjeta "Kam një këngë vetëm për ju"
32 Slovene 2014  Slovenia Ula Ložar "Nisi Sam (Your Light)"
33 Irish 2015  Ireland Aimee Banks "Réalta na mara"
34 Latin
35 Serbo-Croatian  Albania Mishela Rapo "Dambaje"
36 Turkish
37 Swahili
38 German

Winners by language

Wins Language Years Countries
3 Russian 2005, 2006, 2007 Belarus, Russia
2 English 2013, 2015 Malta
Georgian 2011, 2016 Georgia
1 Croatian 2003 Croatia
Spanish 2004 Spain
Imaginary 2008 Georgia
Dutch 2009[1] Netherlands[1]
Armenian 2010 Armenia
Ukrainian 2012[1] Ukraine[1]
Italian 2014[1] Italy[1]

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 These songs was partially sung in English.
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