Spanish Portuguese French Italian Romanian
Some examples of languages that are not Romance languages include English, Mandarin Chinese, Arabic, Russian, Japanese, and Swahili. These languages come from different language families such as Germanic, Sino-Tibetan, Afro-Asiatic, Slavic, Japonic, and Niger-Congo, respectively.
Romance languages.
All romance languages branched off from Latin.
Dr. Gary Chapman, marriage counselor, distilled the 5 love languages, not to be confused with the 5 romance languages. See his book on this theme.
There are actually 5 and they are known as the Romance Languages: Italian, French, Spanish, Portugese and Romanian.
They are called the Romance languages. The most common ones are:AragoneseAromanianArpitanAsturianCatalanCorsicanEmiliano-RomagnoloFrenchFriulanGalicianItalianLadinoLeoneseLombardMirandeseNeapolitanOccitanPiedmontesePortugueseRomanianRomanshSardinianSicilianSpanishVenetianWalloon
romance languages
There is no such country that speaks ALL of the Romance languages. But if you're asking what the major countries in Europe are that speak any Romance languages, they are:SpainPortugalFranceAndorraRomaniaBelguimSwitzerland
Dozens of Romance languages evolved from latin. Here is a partial list:AragoneseCatalánFrenchGalicianItalianLadino (Judeo-Spanish)LombardOccitanPortugueseRomanianRomanschSicilianSpanishSpecifically though, the 5 romantic languages that you were asking about are Spanish, French, Portuguese, Romanian, and Italian.
all the languages that aren't one of the 5 romance languages. the 5 romance languages are italian, french, spanish, portuguese, and romanian.
The only 2 Romance languages on the UN's list of official languages are French and Spanish.