The Mongolic languages are a group of languages spoken in Central Asia. It is divided into groups :
Middle Mongolian
Classic Mongolian
Central Mongolian
Khalkha
Ordos and
Chakhar.
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.
There aren't any European languages that are related to Mongolian, not even remotely.
indo-european
Afrikaans is the language. It is closely related to Dutch.
Persian
No, Japanese is not an Indo-European language. It belongs to a completely different language family called the Japonic language family, which is unrelated to the Indo-European languages spoken in Europe, India, and parts of the Middle East.
It's most closely related to Estonian.Estonian, and Saami (Lapp)estonian
Basque is the European language that is not related to any other language. It is a language isolate, meaning it has no known connections to any other language family.
The Manchu language is closely related to other Tungusic languages, such as Sibe, Xibe, and Evenki.
Latin descends from the ancient Proto-Indo-European language. It was influenced by the Etruscan language and the Greek alphabet. With these influences it developed into Latin in the Italian peninsula.
Afrikaans. It is an Indo-European language of the Germanic language family, and is closely related to (and sometimes mutually intelligible with) Dutch and especially Flemish.
No, Japanese is not an Indo-European language.The Indo-European languages include most languages traditionally spoken in Europe (except Basque, Hungarian and Finnish), including all those derived from Greek, Latin, or both, and a number of languages in western and southern Asia (including Persian, Urdu and Hindi)Japanese is not apparently closely related to any language spoken elsewhere, except on nearby islands (Ryukyu Islands). Korean is also argued to be somewhat related to Japanese, and some linguists have hypothesized a more tenuous connection with the Altaic language group (which includes Turkish, most Central Asia languages and Mongolian).
Maybe Estonian
Here are some facts about Lithuanian:Lithuanian is the official language of Lithuania.The language is closely related to Latvian, although the two are not mutually intelligible.Like Gaelic, Basque and Finnish Lithuanian has very early European roots.It may be the most conservative living Indo-European language, retaining with many features of the Proto-Indo-European now lost in other Indo-European languages