No, but both German and Sanskrit evolved from Indo-European.
maximillen muller
Arthur Frank Joseph Remy has written: 'The influence of India and Persia on the poetry of Germany' -- subject(s): Accessible book, German and Sanskrit, German and Persian, Comparative Literature, Persian and German, German literature, History and criticism, Sanskrit and German
Jochen Mertens has written: 'Die Sanskrit-Inschriften von Bat Chum (Kambodscha)' -- subject(s): Epic poetry, Sanskrit, History and criticism, Inscriptions, Sanskrit, Sanskrit Epic poetry, Sanskrit Inscriptions, Translations into German
The German website Spoken Sanskrit provides a good quality dictionary service. The translation is from Sanskrit character into Latin characters that preserve pronunciation and also gives an English translation.
No, "Siddhartha" by Hermann Hesse was originally written in German and has not been translated into Sanskrit, as Sanskrit is not commonly used for contemporary literature translations. However, it has been translated into many other languages.
No. From German 'kuh' (pronounced 'coo'), via Old English 'cu' and Sanskrit 'go'.
Yes, English and Sanskrit are related through their shared origins in the Proto-Indo-European language. Many words in both languages have a common ancestry, although they have evolved separately over time. Both languages have influenced each other through linguistic borrowing.
Sanskrit (India)
Archaic Sanskrit means Ancient Classical Sanskrit.
There is no 'The'in Sanskrit.
No equivalent word in Sanskrit
Sanskrit for snake is "Surp"