Spanish mainly. Portuguese. And French, Italian etc...
No, Romance languages are not spoken in Poland. The major language groups of Poland are Balto-Slavic languages.
There is no such country that speaks ALL of the Romance languages. But if you're asking what the major countries in Europe are that speak any Romance languages, they are:SpainPortugalFranceAndorraRomaniaBelguimSwitzerland
There is no such country that speaks ALL of the Romance languages. But if you're asking what the major countries in Europe are that speak any Romance languages, they are:SpainPortugalFranceAndorraRomaniaBelguimSwitzerland
"Romance" does not speak any language. This question does not make any sense. the Romance languages are a group of languages. The most notable are Spanish, French, Portuguese, Italian, Romanian, and Latin.
Romance languages include Spanish, French, Italian, Portuguese, and Romanian, among others. These languages developed from Latin, the language of the Roman Empire, and share similar grammatical structures and vocabulary.
all the languages that aren't one of the 5 romance languages. the 5 romance languages are italian, french, spanish, portuguese, and romanian.
Romance languages are languages descending from vulgar Latin. Some of them are completely extinct, others are still spoken today, either as a first or second language.The most common Romance languages are:FrenchItalianPortugueseRomanianSpanishHere is a more complete list of modern Romance languages:AragoneseAsturianCatalanCorsicanEmilianFranco-ProvencalFrenchGalicianItalianJudaeo-Spanish (Ladino)LeoneseMilaneseMirandeseNeapolitanOccitanPicardPiedmontesePortugueseRomanianRomanshSardinianSicilianSpanishVenetianWalloon
No.
Here's a likely answer: Romance languages, like french or spanish,,which have little to do with romance in a romantic, popular sense, are derived from latin (as used by the Romans) while non romance languages do not share the same origins.Romance language has a sort of smoochy tune to itExample, hey baby, wanna come ova tonite (blow kisses)Non-Romantic langusge does not involve any smooch businessHAHAAHHAAHHA
Portuguese is a Latin derived language.The Portuguese people are Linguistically Latin, Racially Celtic (Lusitanic), Geographically Atlanticthough Climatically Mediterranean.
I am not sure that this opinion is valid.
The Romance languages are primarily derived from Latin, as spoken at the time of the Roman Empire. The vocabulary of the Romance languages is similar to that of Latin. Modern Romance languages have shed many of the grammatical features of Latin and acquired new ones. The reliance on word order (subject-verb-object) is a well known feature of the main Romance languages (and also English). Of course, like in any language, there are features that are derived from other languages. This inter-mixing often happens when two (or more) languages are in close proximity to each other. This is what happened to French and English - English has a vocabulary composed of a tremendous amount of French words. Other romance languages, like Spanish, borrow heavily from English when the speakers of both languages are in proximity, or when an equivalent term in a language is more difficult or wordy than a term in another language (this happens frequently for technical, medical, and other highly-specialized fields). One notable example that is not related to a specialized field is the French word "week-end" - a blatant copy of the English word that means the same thing. The closest French equivalent is "fin de semaine" (although the semantics are not exact).