No. Armenian and Georgian languages are quite different.
Armenian language belongs to Indo-European languages' family, consisting a separate branch thereof. While Georgian language is Caucasian language and has been for centuries as only Caucasian language, having alphabet and literature.
Georgian and Armenian languages are written by their own scripts. Georgian alphabet was invented by King Parnavaz of Iberia in V c BC. The oldest Georgian inscription found ever belongs to II AD. Georgian alphabet has changed its forms for 2 times and nowadays Georgian language has 3 different alphabets. First 2 is used for church services and the newest is the official script for Georgian language as a state language of Georgia.
Armenian alphabet was invented by Armenian scholar Mesrop Mashtots in V c AD, 10 centuries later. It has never changed forms, only some letters were added in later mid centuries and it is used as official script for Armenian language.
Davit Chikvaidze
French is a Romance Language.
English, French, and German belong to the Indo-European language family.
English and Italian both belong to the Indo-European language family. More specifically, Italian is considered a Romance language while English is Germantic.
India
Georgian belongs to the Caucasian family of languages.
Chinese
Persian belongs to the Indo-Iranian branch of the Indo-European language family.
Old English belonged to the Germanic language family.
The Nipmucs spoke a dialect of Natick, which is part of the Algonquian language family. Their name means "people at the small pond".
Italian belongs to the Romance language family, which is a branch of the larger Indo-European language family. Other languages in this family include French, Spanish, Portuguese, and Romanian.
The English language belongs to the Germanic family of languages, which also includes German, Dutch, and Swedish.
English belongs to the Indo-European language family. It is specifically classified as a member of the Germanic branch within the Indo-European family of languages.