If I missed any, please add to this list:
Proto-Armenian
Classical Armenian
Middle Armenian
Old Prussian
Curonian
Galindian
Selonian
Semigallian
Sudovian
Yotvingian
Gaulish
Lepontic
Galatian
Celtiberian
Polabian
Knaanic
Yes, linguists have traced the English language back to its roots in the Proto-Indo-European language, which is believed to have been spoken around 4500 BC. English is part of the Indo-European language family, which also includes languages like Spanish, French, and Hindi.
Akkadian language Ancient Egyptian language Elamite language Etruscan language Extinct languages of Italy Gaulish language Ancient Greek language Hittite language Hurro-Urartian languages Archaic Japanese language Latin language Old Chinese Old Persian language Old South Arabian languages Paleo-Balkan languages Paleo-Iberian languages Pāli Sanskrit Sumerian language
Italian and Welsh are not directly related as they come from different language families. Italian is a Romance language, originating from Latin, while Welsh is a Celtic language, part of the Brythonic branch. They evolved separately from different ancestral languages.
Mark Donohue has written: 'Wulguru' -- subject(s): Languages, Extinct languages, Wulguru language 'Warembori' -- subject(s): Languages, Warembori language, Papua (Indonesia)
The modern Celtic languages are:IrishScottish GaelicManxWelshBretonCornishand various extinct languages: Gaulish, Celtiberian, Lepontic, Galatian, etc.
It is a branch of the Indo European group of languages, including German, Dutch, English, Scandinavian languages, Afrikaans, Flemish, Frisian and the extinct Gothic language
The term "Germanic" comes from the original language spoken by early Germanic tribes in ancient Europe. It refers to a branch of the Indo-European language family that includes languages such as German, English, Dutch, Swedish, and others. The Germanic languages developed over thousands of years through contact with other languages and cultures.
If you mean bastard, as in fatherless; then no... it is in the family language of the germanic - indoeuropean - japhetic trace of languages from the tower of babel. But it is becoming a "bastard" language in the sense that surely a great number of more than half of the people who speak it speak it as a second language, mainly pressured by business, colonization and cultural pressure.
Gaelic refers to a group of related languages spoken predominantly in Ireland and Scotland. The main Gaelic languages are Irish Gaelic (Gaeilge) spoken in Ireland and Scottish Gaelic (Gàidhlig) spoken in Scotland. These languages belong to the Celtic language family.
Yes, there are many languages that are no longer spoken due to various reasons such as globalization, colonization, and cultural assimilation. These languages are referred to as extinct languages. It is estimated that around half of the world's languages are in danger of becoming extinct in the near future.
Today they only speak English. In the past, their native language was Tutelo, which was a Siouan language. It went extinct in the 1980s.
None. The original languages of Great Britain are long extinct.