No. All those languages mentioned and a few others evolved from a particular spoken Latin, in the regions of Europe where the Latin Language was spread, and all of them are called Romance languages.
Because of that they are all different and at the same time they share common roots and are part of the same language group (Western Romance).
All of those languages have influenced each other's, though, in one way or another.
Yes, Portuguese is a Romance language. It is derived from Latin and is closely related to other Romance languages such as Spanish, French, and Italian.
Bucharest is in Romania. The language there is Romanian. Romanian is a Romance language derived from Latin and related to Spanish, Portuguese, French and Italian.
Spanish, French, and Portuguese are Romance languages, meaning that they all descend from Latin.
Language. The region is comprised by countries whose language is derived from 'Latin' - namely Spanish, French and Portuguese.
Spanish, French, Portuguese, Italian, Romanian
Latin. French, Spanish, Portuguese, and Italian are Romance languages that evolved from Latin, the language of ancient Rome.
The Romans did not influence English and Greek. They influenced Spanish, French and modern Italian. The Greek language was around before the Roman language, and English is a Germanic language not Roman. The most popular languages at the time where Roman, Greek, and German. Roman- Spanish, Modern Italian, French German-English, Swedish, Dutch, Norwegian, Finish, Polish, Czech, Greek- Roman, Spanish, Armenian, Albanian, ect.
Italian, like French, Spanish, Portuguese and Romanian, is a Romance language; that is a language derived from Vulgar Latin, a mixture of Latin and local languages which developed in parallel with classical Latin.
No, Danish is not a Romance language. It belongs to the North Germanic branch of the Germanic language group. Romance languages are derived from Latin and include languages like Spanish, French, Italian, and Portuguese.
It is a Romance language; as is French, Spanish, Portuguese, and Romanian.
The Spanish-speaking country that also has Portuguese as an official language is Equatorial Guinea. It is the only country in Africa where Spanish is an official language, alongside Portuguese and French. The presence of Portuguese is a result of historical ties and the country's adoption of the language in recent decades.
The language that is most similar to Spanish is Portuguese. Both Spanish and Portuguese belong to the Romance language family, which evolved from Latin. They share similar vocabulary, grammar structures, and pronunciation.