From Dravidian language
No, English and Punjabi are not in the same language family. English belongs to the Germanic branch of the Indo-European language family, while Punjabi belongs to the Indo-Iranian branch of the Indo-European language family.
Derived traits are traits that appeared in the most recent common ancestor of the group and was passed on to it's decedents. Ancestral traits are inherited directly from the ancestor
The word "addendum" is derived from Latin. It is the neuter form of the verb "addere," which means "to add."
There is no "Indian language." In India, they speak a variety of languages, the most common of which are Hindu and English, but none are called "Indian."
Languages are organsed into families. Languages in a family are related through descent from a common ancestral language or parental language, called the proto-language of that family.
Modern English comes immediately from Middle English, the language of Chaucer. That derived from Old English or Anglo-Saxon, the language of Beowulf. That language, little more than a Germanic dialect, derived from Common Germanic, the common language of all Germanic languages (Dutch, Friese, German, Scandinavian...).
Ancestral traits were traits retained by a species from a common ancestor. Examples would be the wings on birds and five fingers on the human hand.
The common word is 'moti'. wrongly edited superviser. moti is in hindi and not a common word in indian language. muthu in Tamil ,malayala. and mauktika in sanskrit
Awoh is not a common term in Indian symbols or language. It does not have any specific meaning in the context of Indian culture or symbols.
An ancestral trait is a trait that is shared by a group of organisms and their common ancestor. It is a characteristic that has been inherited from a common ancestor and has been passed down through generations without change.
No. English and German are like cousins, sharing common ancestry but developing separately.
"Nut" is one of those words that has been a part of English for as long as there has been an English. It is clearly related to the words from related languages such as Dutch or German for the same thing which suggest that they all derive from a common ancestral Teutonic root in a common ancestral Teutonic language which wasn't written down.