No. French, Spanish, and Italian are, as they derived from the ancient Roman language of Latin.
No, Russian is not a Romance language. It belongs to the Slavic language family, which is distinct from Romance languages like French, Spanish, and Italian.
If the language isn't Spanish, French, Portuguese, Romanian, Italian, Catalan, Galician, Corsican, Lombard, Occitan, Aromanian, Sardinian, Sicilian, Venetian, or Friulian, it isn't a Romance language. The first six are the most widely spoken Romance languages, the rest have a much smaller number of native speakers.~Russian is not a romantic language.
The one that isn't French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, or Romanian.A few minor languages, mostly from places that neighbor a region speaking one of those, are romance languages too: Galician, Gascon, Catalan, Sicilian, etc.
No, Russian is not Spanish. Russian is a Slavic language spoken primarily in Russia and other countries of the former Soviet Union, while Spanish is a Romance language spoken mainly in Spain and Latin America. They belong to different language families and have different grammatical structures and vocabulary.
Yes, the French language is a Romance language. It evolved from Latin and is part of the Romance language family, which includes other languages like Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, and Romanian.
No, Romanian is a Romance language, belonging to the same language family as French, Italian, and Spanish. Slavic languages, on the other hand, are a separate language group that includes languages like Russian, Polish, and Czech.
If the language isn't Spanish, French, Portuguese, Romanian, Italian, Catalan, Galician, Corsican, Lombard, Occitan, Aromanian, Sardinian, Sicilian, Venetian, or Friulian, it isn't a Romance language. The first six are the most widely spoken Romance languages, the rest have a much smaller number of native speakers.~Russian is not a romantic language.
The one that isn't French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, or Romanian.A few minor languages, mostly from places that neighbor a region speaking one of those, are romance languages too: Galician, Gascon, Catalan, Sicilian, etc.
No, Russian is not Spanish. Russian is a Slavic language spoken primarily in Russia and other countries of the former Soviet Union, while Spanish is a Romance language spoken mainly in Spain and Latin America. They belong to different language families and have different grammatical structures and vocabulary.
English, French, Arabic, Russian, Spanish & Chinese are the official languages in the UN.
A Russian Romance - 1910 was released on: USA: 5 November 1910
A Russian Romance - 1909 was released on: USA: 19 June 1909
No, French was primarly the romance language, along with Italian but English is a secondary romance language.
Yes, the French language is a Romance language. It evolved from Latin and is part of the Romance language family, which includes other languages like Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, and Romanian.
No, Romanian is a Romance language, belonging to the same language family as French, Italian, and Spanish. Slavic languages, on the other hand, are a separate language group that includes languages like Russian, Polish, and Czech.
Latin was the language spoken by the ancient Romans and became the basis for the Romance languages, which are French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian and Romanian. The word "romance" in referring to the languages and cultures of certain European countries, does not mean the hearts and flowers stuff, such as in the "romance" novels. It is an adjective derived from the word Roman or Rome.
No, Japanese is not a romance language. It belongs to a different language family called Japonic, which is independent of the romance languages such as Spanish, French, and Italian.
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.