No, it isn't. Chinese and Mongolian are so different, first is the writing( As i am a Chinese person, I think Mongolian is very intricacy than Chinese, sometimes maybe it is just is few word then can let you know the meaning in Chinese, but in Mongolian it will take a lot of word!), second is the sound( wow, that is very different, everyone can heard that is different.)
Linguistic Answer:
No, the two languages are unrelated. Mongolian is part of the Altaic family, and Mandarin Chinese is part of the Sino-Tibetan family.
modern mongolian in the country of Mongolia is mostly written in the alphabet of the Russians. mongolian and Chinese belong to two different language family Chinese is in sino-tibetan, where mongolian is not a member of this language family... so... yeah, mongols and Chinese speak different language, but most mongolians living in inner Mongolia (within the Chinese border) is pretty fluent in Chinese.
The Gobi Desert is home to speakers of Chinese dialects as well as Mongolian.
That is correct. The Manchu language, also known as Manchurian, belongs to the Tungusic language family, which is distinct from the Sino-Tibetan language family that includes Mandarin Chinese. Manchu was historically spoken in the region of Manchuria by the Manchu people.
Genghis Khan spoke Mongolian, which was his native language and the language of his empire. In addition, he likely had some knowledge of Turkic and Chinese languages due to his interactions with neighboring tribes and empires.
We say "What is your name" -Chinii ner khen be?? In Mongolian language.
He was a Mongolian and the son of Genghis Khan.
- Mongolian language - Moldovan language
The Mongolic languages are a group of languages spoken in Central Asia. It is divided into groups :Middle MongolianClassic MongolianCentral MongolianKhalkhaOrdos andChakhar.Mongolian language is different in the North, West, East and South of Mongolia.In the North, they speak Buryat.In the West, they speak Oirat.The Mongolian language is realted to Korean, Turkish, Altaic and Manchu-Tungus.
The Wall.
Shigeo Ozawa has written: 'Mongorugo to Nihongo' -- subject(s): Comparative Grammar, Japanese, Japanese language, Mongolian, Mongolian languages 'Gencho hishi' 'Gendai Mongorugo jiten' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Japanese, Japanese language, Mongolian, Mongolian language 'Mongorugo no hanashi' -- subject(s): Japanese, Mongolian language, Textbooks for foreign speakers
In Asia; Mongolian.
The language of Japan is an isolate, meaning that it has not been proven to derive from any other language. There are of course borrowed words from Chinese and English. And some characters are of Chinese origin.