They are all Romance languages, meaning they evolved from Latin.
French and Italian are both Romance languages. (Not 'romantic' languages!)
the food type is really wide, but the main kinds are spanish, Italian and french
French and Italian are both Romance languages. They belong to the same language family as Spanish, Portuguese, and Romanian. These languages evolved from Latin and are spoken in countries with a historical connection to the Roman Empire.
the food type is really wide, but the main kinds are spanish, Italian and french
Succesvol-Dutch. Reussi-French. Assertado-Spanish. Erfolgreich-Getman. Riuscito-italian. I'm sorry if there are spelling errors. I just went to yahoo babel fish.com or yahoo translations. You type a word or phrase into a text box then choose Whig language you want to translate it to and what language you are translating it from. It's quick and easy--try it !
Italian is part of the family of roman languages. Also part of this family are, spanish, french, portugeuse, romanic and retro-romanic.
No. Haitian Creole is a form of French-Based Patois, that was formed in Haiti. But yes, its a mixed language that includes Native American, Spanish, French, English, & African words.
No. Portuguese is a Romance language--as are Spanish and French--that is quite distinct from Spanish. They're more closely related than, say, Romanian (also a Romance language) and Spanish thanks to geography, but they are still distinct languages.
No, Italians speak a Romance language called Italian.
They are similar in the accents. The accents are the same in writing but their use is completely different . Where in French they are almost always used to change the pronunciation of a vowel in Italian they generally change where the stress falls in a words (stress generally falls on the second last syllable in Italian unless an accent dictates otherwise). Their vocabulary is very similar, although Spanish is pronounced phonetically like Italian where French is not, the vocab itself is more similar between Italian and French. Spanish and Portuguese are more closely related (due to relations in the past). Also verb formation, and types of verbs are very similar (indicative, imperative, subjunctive, conditional) also the type of conjugation one chooses changes the mood of the verb in question. As a student who has studied Spanish, French, and Italian. French and Italian are more closely related that it would sound. For lexical similarities check the related link.
Spanish
This is a fallacy known as non sequitur, where the conclusion does not logically follow from the premise. Just because someone is skilled in one language does not mean they are automatically skilled in a different language.