Most languages not in Europe. Finnish, Estonian and Hungarian and other Uralic languages are not indo European languages in origin. Persian, and languages developed from Sanskrit (ie Hindi, Urdu, Bengali, punjabi etc.) ARE indo-European. Maltese is not. Telugu, Kannada, and Tamil are Indian languages that are Dravidian, not related to Sanskrit. You weren't very specific so this is the best I can do, sorry.
No, they do not!Definitely not. If there was a single place of origin it would have been somewhere in Africa.
No, in Spain the language is Spanish, and in Portugal the language is Portuguese. They are similar languages. May be that both have a common origin, but each country has its own language, history and customs.
Romance language all originated from Latin.
No, they do not!Definitely not. If there was a single place of origin it would have been somewhere in Africa.
Godoy is a name of Galician origin, indicating the person is from Godoy, a place in Galicia. The word may have roots in one of the Gothic languages.
Research done in India is generally very inaccurate. It is true in any developing world. All the Indian languages have their origin in Sanskrit, a IndoEuropean language. Kannada is a more complete and classical language unlike Tamil which lacks even basic letters like 'ha' in its alphabet. Telugu script has its origin in Kannada. So do Konkani and Tulu languages.
It belongs to the Celtic subdivision of Indoeuropean languages. It includes Irish, Scottish and Manx Gaelic, all separate languages. Welsh, Breton and Cornish belong to the other branch of Celtic.
Dayanna is a female-baby name from Indoeuropean origin. It's basically a derivative of the name 'Diana', and it's used mostly in English-speaking countries.
No. Italian is a Romance language derived from Latin; Welsh is a Celtic language (they are both Indoeuropean languages). Welsh has some words borrowed from Latin.
Indo-European paganism is any form of paganism (roughly, polytheistic religion) of people who speak Indo-European languages, which include Sanskrit and the languages of India, Avestan and the languages of Persia, Greek, Latin, and Celtic languages, Germanic, Slavic and Baltic languages, Albanian and Armenian. For more information see <A HREF="http://pierce.yolasite.com/">Proto-Indo-European religion</A>.
Indoeuropean meaning is light, or deity.
There aren't any languages that originated from Spanish.
No, they do not!Definitely not. If there was a single place of origin it would have been somewhere in Africa.
Latin-derived languages - as their name suggest - have their origin in the Latin language, which falls under the Italic languages. English on the other hand (as German, Dutch and the Scandinavian languages) has its origin in the Germanic languages.However, both Italic and Germanic languages are connected to each other by both being part of the Indo-European languages.
No, in Spain the language is Spanish, and in Portugal the language is Portuguese. They are similar languages. May be that both have a common origin, but each country has its own language, history and customs.
Romance language all originated from Latin.
It is called the "etymology".