Latin. It's called Romance, from the Romans.
No, French was primarly the romance language, along with Italian but English is a secondary romance language.
Yes. The Romance Languages are the modern descendants of Latin, the language of Rome, whence the word "Romance."
Latin was the language spoken by the ancient Romans and became the basis for the Romance languages, which are French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian and Romanian. The word "romance" in referring to the languages and cultures of certain European countries, does not mean the hearts and flowers stuff, such as in the "romance" novels. It is an adjective derived from the word Roman or Rome.
A Romance language does not mean it is a language that is sweet and charming, though they usually are. What "Romance" means is that the languages all come from a specific language group. In the case of French, it is considered a Romance language because it is rooted in Latin, the primary language of the Romans. Other Romance languages are Spanish, Italian, and Portuguese.French is a romance language (derived from Latin) and it is believed to have developed from the street or gutter language spoken in the Roman Empire.
All romance languages branched off from Latin.
TurkeyTurkey does not use a Romance language as its official language; the other two nations do, however
No, German is not a romance language. It belongs to the Germanic language family, along with English, Dutch, and Swedish. Romance languages are derived from Latin and include languages like Spanish, French, and Italian.
No, it is a Germanic language.
Spanish is considered to be a "Romance Language" because it is a Latin-based language which originated in the Roman Empire.
Romance branch of the Indo-European language family.
Romanian is a Romance language spoken by Balkan people.
No.