Answer: Romanian is not a Slavic language, it is a Romance language. However though, Romanian does have a lot of Slavic-Russian influence in its language. Because Russia owned Romania when Eastern Europe was communist. Romanian also has a lot of cognates with Russian due to this. Think of it like English. English itself, belongs to the Germanic/Anglo-Saxon family of languages. But today, you'll find TONS of Latin-Romance influences on English. In fact, about 3/4 of modern day English is influenced by Latin-Romance that it doesn't even look like a Germanic/Anglo-Saxon language anymore. Our English prefixes and suffixes are Spanish and Italian words themselves.
Romanian because of it's close proximity to a variety of Slavic languages including Bulgarian, Serbian, Ukrainian, and Russian.
One example of a language that starts with the letter "R" is Russian. It is an East Slavic language spoken predominantly in Russia and other countries of the former Soviet Union.
Romanian is a Romance language, which means it evolved from Latin. It developed in the Balkans as part of the Eastern Romance group of languages and was influenced by surrounding Slavic languages. This linguistic evolution occurred over centuries as the Roman Empire expanded and contracted.
Serbo-Croatian belongs to the South Slavic branch of the Slavic language family.
The most spoken Slavic language is Russia. Russian minorities in other Slavic states maintain their language too.
The Romanian language is a Latin (Romanic) language with strong Slavic influences.
Not known, probably formed in the 9th century, evolved from Latin vulgata with slavic influences.
Romanian because of it's close proximity to a variety of Slavic languages including Bulgarian, Serbian, Ukrainian, and Russian.
The only lexis we have in common is of Slavic origin: more than 90% in Bulgarian, and only approximately 15% in Romanian (which is a Latin language).
The nationality of the Romanian people; Romania is a country in the Eastern part of Europe. The Romanian language is of Latin origin; the Romanian people is of Dacian origin with some Slavic influences (and other influences from the migratory peoples).
Geographically Romania is not a Balkan country - Balkan mountains are on the South of Danube and Romania is at the north. But as history, religion, cuisine, folklore and culture Romania is very near to Balkan region.
All of those languages are part of the same language familiy, the romance languages, all of which can trace their origins in Latin. Romanian has a slight slavic influence because of Romania's eastern European background, which features slavic neighbours, aswell as finno-ugric neighbours (the hungarians). Romanian has loanwords from many of these languages, and also from Turkish, greek, and German. However, non-slavic influences are limited only to vocabulary mostly, and still, most romanian words are of latin origin. Romanian is probably the lesser known of the big five romance languages, and most people who never heard romanian think it's a slavic language because of it's eastern European position. Romanian is in several ways closer to latin than the other romance languages.
One example of a language that starts with the letter "R" is Russian. It is an East Slavic language spoken predominantly in Russia and other countries of the former Soviet Union.
No. The 5 major romance languages are Spanish, French, Italian, Portugese, and Romanian. Provençal, Catalan, Rhaeto-Romanic, Sardinian, and Ladino are the others.
Romanian is a Romance language, which means it evolved from Latin. It developed in the Balkans as part of the Eastern Romance group of languages and was influenced by surrounding Slavic languages. This linguistic evolution occurred over centuries as the Roman Empire expanded and contracted.
Yes, Lithuanian is the the Balto-Slavic language family.
All are equally related, but Romanian has been the most isolated, and has many features and words borrowed from Slavic languages.