<Li> One of the two official national anthems of New Zealand, "God Defend New Zealand", is commonly now sung with the first verse in Māori ("Aotearoa") and the second in English ("God Defend New Zealand"). The tune is the same but the words are not a direct translation of each other . </Li> <Li> "God Bless Fiji" has lyrics in English and Fijian which are not translations of each other . Although official, the Fijian version is rarely sung, and it is usually the English version that is performed at international sporting events . </Li> <Li> Although Singapore has four official languages, with English being the current lingua franca, the national anthem, "Majulah Singapura" is in Malay and by law can only be sung with its original Malay lyrics, despite the fact that Malay is a minority language in Singapore . This is because Part XIII of the Constitution of the Republic of Singapore declares, "the national language shall be the Malay language and shall be in the Roman script (...)" </Li> <Li> There are several countries that do not have official lyrics to their national anthems . One of these is the "Marcha Real", the national anthem of Spain . Although it originally had lyrics those lyrics were discontinued after governmental changes in the early 1980s after Francisco Franco's dictactorship . In 2007 a national competition to write words was held, but no lyrics were chosen . Other national anthems with no words include "Inno Nazionale della Repubblica", the national anthem of San Marino, that of Bosnia and Herzegovina and that of Kosovo, entitled "Europe". </Li>

Countries that make you stand for the national anthem