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Languages
 
Ireland 1972 was sung in Gaelic
Ireland 1972 in Gaelic Switzerland 1989 in Romansch Belgium 2003 in Nonsense!

Eurovision entries can be no longer than three minutes and they must have a vocal - there have never been totally instrumental entries (though the 1995 Norwegian winner came closest). 

So what language to sing in? When the contest began, songs could be in any language, but from 1966 to 1998 entries had to be sung in a native language of the country (with the exception of a five year period in the mid 70s which coincided with string of big selling contest winners like "Waterloo" and "Save Your Kisses For Me".  During this period, Scandinavian and Benelux countries took the chance to sing in English and all tended to fare better than of late. Would Abba have won and broken through if they had been forced to perform it in Swedish?.

By 1977, the European Broadcasting Union who run the contest had decided to revert to the old rule. Their decision was made after the Belgian and German songs had been selected, and neither had a native language version, so they were allowed to sing in English. Neither did especially well.  The native-language rule was well and truly back in place and would remain so for more than two decades. During this era, there were some oddities:  France sent songs in both the Creole and Breton dialects.  Belgium alternated religiously between French and Flemish. Back in 1972 Ireland sent a song in Gaelic.  Switzerland sent songs in French, German and Italian and in 1989 even a song in Romansch.

After a series of English language winners in the early and mid-nineties it was perhaps long overdue to free-up the language and that happened in 1999.  As had happened two decades earlier the Scandinavians and Benelux countries were the most enthusiastic and Sweden and Iceland fought for the Grand Prix with up-tempo English language songs. A trend soon grew of combining languages. This peaked in 2001 when no less than six entries began in native tongue before switching to English.

The free language rule seems hear to stay, but there is still room for some non-English quirkiness. The Belgian runner-up song from 2003 "Sanomi" was in neither Flemish, French nor English, but an imaginary language know only by the group. A year later an atmospheric and quite instrumental native-tongue entry from Serbia & Montenegro also filled second place. The very recent years have seen Cypriot entries in French, Romanian ones in Italian and even French and German ones entirely in English, unthinkable a few years ago!.