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).
No, Hindi is not the root of the English language. English developed from a combination of various languages, including Latin, Germanic languages, and French. It has its roots in the Germanic branch of the Indo-European language family.
I understand Hindi and can provide responses in Hindi, but my primary language is English.
Hindi. "Achha" means "good" in Hindi.
The root of the word "aap" in Hindi language is "aap" itself. It is a polite form of addressing someone, often used to show respect or formality.
"Hindi" in English means the national language of India spoken by millions of people as their first language.
The Hindi name for vulgar salve root is "Jivanti."
I understand Hindi and can provide responses in Hindi, but my primary language is English.
The Hindi version of this number is similar to that of the English language.
The root of the word "aap" in Hindi language is "aap" itself. It is a polite form of addressing someone, often used to show respect or formality.
Hindi. "Achha" means "good" in Hindi.
The first letter of Hindi is same as English. It is A.
I have a question first..how did Hindi language.. Developed?
Rupert Snell has written: 'The Eighty-Four Hymns of Hita Harivamsa' 'Beginner's Hindi script' -- subject- s -: Alphabet, Devanagari alphabet, English, Hindi language, Self-instruction, Textbooks for foreign speakers, Writing 'Teach Yourself Beginner's Hindi' 'Teach Yourself Beginner's Hindi' 'Hindi and English dictionary' -- subject- s -: Dictionaries, English, English language, Hindi, Hindi language 'Teach Yourself Hindi Dictionary' 'Teach Yourself Beginner's Hindi Script'
"Hindi" in English means the national language of India spoken by millions of people as their first language.
The Hindi name for vulgar salve root is "Jivanti."
Binod K. Sinha has written: 'Contrastive analysis of English and Hindi nominal phrase' -- subject(s): Comparative Grammar, Contrastive linguistics, English, English language, Hindi, Hindi language, Nominals
The main language of India is the Hindi Language. The English word 'horse' translates in HIndi as the word 'Ghora'.
OK i don't know the English transliteration but in Hindi it'sगेंडा