From the point of view of grammar and morphology, English is a Germanic language, but it is overlain with many words taken from Norman French, a romance language. Remember, England was once captured by the French.
No, Hebrew is unrelated to the Romance languages, which originated in Europe. Hebrew originated in the Middle East, and is part of the Semitic language family, along with Arabic, Aramaic, Phoenician, Ugaritic, Syriac, and many others.
The Romance languages evolved from Latin, and originated in Italy.
No. It's a semitic language, just like arabic.
No, French was primarly the romance language, along with Italian but English is a secondary romance language.
No, German is not a romance language. It belongs to the Germanic language family, along with English, Dutch, and Swedish. Romance languages are derived from Latin and include languages like Spanish, French, and Italian.
English language
Latin is the base language for the Romance languages, which include Spanish, French, Italian, Portuguese, and Romanian. These languages developed from Latin after the fall of the Roman Empire.
No, it is classified by linguists as a Germanic language.
I think you are asking about ESPERANTO
English and Italian both belong to the Indo-European language family. More specifically, Italian is considered a Romance language while English is Germantic.
The reason why english is a germanic language and not a romance language is because when the romans kicked the germans out of rome. the germans were so mad that they took at lot from other languages around the time such as french and spanish and put there own german spin on them.
The Phoenicians are credited with the invention of the alphabet used for the English language and other Romance languages.
Romance Language, as opposed to a Germanic language like English, is the way that Italian is classed linguistically.
Roman Catholic, English, French
The Romance language spoken in Madagascar is French, although a hefty portion of the population speaks Malagasy, and there's a small but growing number of English speakers.