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The image presents a table of population data showing people living in foreign countries, with columns labeled British, Germans, Italian, Polish, Spanish, and Total, while the rows are labeled as where they live: British, Germans, Italy, Poland, Spain; within the table, British: 297,000; Germans: 119,000; Italian: 550,000; Polish: 71,000; Spanish: 1,037,000; totals: Germans 104,000; British 556,000; Italian 426,000; Polish 112,000; Spanish 1,198,000; totals: Italy 29,000; British 42,000; Germans 106,000; Polish 19,000; Spanish 196,000; totals: Poland 760; British 4,000; Germans 670; Italian 170; Spanish 6,000; totals: Spain 391,000; British 196,000; Germans 188,000; Polish 86,000; totals 861,000; overall totals: 524,000 for British, 539,000 for Germans, 863,000 for Italian, 1,168,000 for Polish, 202,170 for Spanish, with a total of 3,298,000 across all categories.
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The table shows the number of people from five European countries living in one another’s nations in 2011.
Overall, the UK and Germany were the most popular destinations for European residents, whereas Italy and Poland hosted relatively small numbers.
In the UK, approximately 1.04 million Europeans were living there, with Poles forming the largest group at around 550,000. This was followed by Germans, Italians and Spaniards. Germany hosted an even higher total of about 1.2 million Europeans, mainly Italians and Polish nationals.
Spain also attracted a considerable number of Europeans, totalling roughly 861,000, most of whom were British, German and Italian. In contrast, Italy and Poland had far fewer European residents, with totals of about 196,000 and just 6,000 respectively.
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