Yes (more specifically, Linguists did).
true i think
The parent language of English is Proto-Indo-European. This ancient language is believed to have been spoken thousands of years ago and is the common ancestor of many languages spoken today in Europe, South Asia, and other regions.
There are many books and websites devoted to teaching parents and children how to do baby sign language. Sign language is taught to a baby by watching the parent do the sign and say the meaning. For example, if the parent is giving the baby milk, the parent would do the sign for milk and say the word milk.
parent conferences were held in english
1. Indo-European 2. Balto-Slavic 3. Slavic 4. East Slavic 5. Russian This is the most accurate time-line of the Russian language that I know of.. I hope this is what you were looking for~! :D
true i think
if you mean what is the mother of English, it is Latin
In English, a female parent is called a mother.
German is the parent language of old English, which is fairly unintelligible with modern English. English had a lot of old French (which was very close to Latin) input during the Norman conquest, and is now a mix between the two language groups (romance and germanic).
Creole typically refers to a person of mixed European and African or Afro-Caribbean descent, and can also refer to a specific language or culture that developed from the blending of different languages and cultures. "Black" is a broader term used to describe people with African ancestry, regardless of specific ethnic or cultural background. While some individuals may identify as both Creole and black, they are not synonymous terms.
European settlement in Australia began with the arrival of the First Fleet in 1788. The introduced language was English, and from that point, the Australian form of the English language began to evolve, and of course, the various Australian slang terms came emerged, often based on, or evolving from the parent English.
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Parent conferences were held in English
The correct phrase is expecting parent or expectant parent
L. H. Ekstrand has written: 'Comparing psychocultural patterns' -- subject(s): Parents, Attitudes, Parent and child 'English without a book revisited' -- subject(s): English language, Foreign speakers, Study and teaching, Acquisition, Language, Children
They have an English and an Abyssinian parent.
F1