Reuters Britain has chosen to leave the European Union and now analysts warn that other European countries may feel inspired to carry out their own referendums.

Almost immediately after news outlets called a Brexit, several European politicians made comments about having their own referendums. As Business Insider's Natasha Bertrand previously outlined:

And it is not just the politicians.

In a recent note to clients, Ajay Rajadhyaksha at Barclays shared a chart using May poll data from Ipsos MORI, which shows:

1. The percentage of respondents in a given nation who think their country should hold a referendum on EU membership.

2. The percentage of respondents who would vote "out" if the referendum was held now.

The poll suggests that "nearly half of euro area citizens wanted a referendum on EU membership in their own country, including majorities in France and Italy," Rajadhyaksha wrote in the note.

"Anxiety over immigration and a weak economic recovery have greatly eroded pro-EU sentiment in the euro area," he added.

Note: this poll was published in May, and the interviews were conducted between March 25 and April 8, 2016— which means these results predate the Brexit vote.

And here is the chart: