Yes it does.
No, danish comes from the same group of languages as English do: the germanic languages (and they come from the Indo-European languages). While English is a germanic language, danish is also a part of the northern languages (the languages in Scandinavia).
English is a Germanic language.
The English word wood comes from the Old English word wudu which comes from the Germanic and Welsh word gwydd. The word gwydd translates to tree.
no, worship comes from old English and has equivalents in Germanic languages.
Modern English comes immediately from Middle English, the language of Chaucer. That derived from Old English or Anglo-Saxon, the language of Beowulf. That language, little more than a Germanic dialect, derived from Common Germanic, the common language of all Germanic languages (Dutch, Friese, German, Scandinavian...).
"Hundred" comes from Old English. It has a Germanic origin and is related to the Dutch "honderd" and German "hundert."
The word hammer comes from the Old English word hamor which in Germanic means "stone"
The word "six" comes from the Old English word "siex," which is derived from the Proto-Germanic word "sekhs."
The word "English" comes from the name of the nation where the language originated, England. The name "England" itself comes from "Angle", which in this case referred to a Germanic tribe that settled England in the 5th and 6th centuries.
Reindeer is both the singular and plural.This is because of the English language's Germanic origin. Germanic languages have neuter nouns where the singular and plural are exactly the same.To give a Germanic to English example::ett hjort = one deertre hjort = three deerThe modern English language has retained some of its Germanic features like this, especially when it comes to animals (sheep, fish, deer, etc).
English is a West Germanic language that is part of the Germanic language branch within the Indo-European language family.
No. Old English comes from the Western Germanic language-family, and has absorbed more from French than from anything else.Both English and Hindi are part of the Indo-European language tree, with roots in what is called Proto Indo-European (PIE).