All Latin related languages, such as French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese
All Germanic languages, such as English, German, Norwegian, Swedish, Dutch
All Slavic languages, such as Russian, Polish, Czech, Serbo-Croat.
Many other European languages, such as Greek and Gaelic.
Most languages spoken in Northern India, such as Hindi, Oria, etc
Finally Persian and/or Farsi, spoken in Iran.
hoped this helps.
Indo-European paganism is any form of paganism (roughly, polytheistic religion) of people who speak Indo-European languages, which include Sanskrit and the languages of India, Avestan and the languages of Persia, Greek, Latin, and Celtic languages, Germanic, Slavic and Baltic languages, Albanian and Armenian. For more information see <A HREF="http://pierce.yolasite.com/">Proto-Indo-European religion</A>.
Indoeuropean meaning is light, or deity.
It belongs to the Celtic subdivision of Indoeuropean languages. It includes Irish, Scottish and Manx Gaelic, all separate languages. Welsh, Breton and Cornish belong to the other branch of Celtic.
Italian and Welsh are not directly related as they come from different language families. Italian is a Romance language, originating from Latin, while Welsh is a Celtic language, part of the Brythonic branch. They evolved separately from different ancestral languages.
Some examples of languages that do not have a written form include some indigenous languages spoken by small communities, such as some Australian Aboriginal languages or some African tribal languages. These languages have traditionally been passed down orally from generation to generation.
Research done in India is generally very inaccurate. It is true in any developing world. All the Indian languages have their origin in Sanskrit, a IndoEuropean language. Kannada is a more complete and classical language unlike Tamil which lacks even basic letters like 'ha' in its alphabet. Telugu script has its origin in Kannada. So do Konkani and Tulu languages.
If you mean bastard, as in fatherless; then no... it is in the family language of the germanic - indoeuropean - japhetic trace of languages from the tower of babel. But it is becoming a "bastard" language in the sense that surely a great number of more than half of the people who speak it speak it as a second language, mainly pressured by business, colonization and cultural pressure.
Some examples of languages spoken without the use of writing systems include some indigenous languages in remote regions, such as some Amazonian languages or certain African tribal languages. These languages have been traditionally passed down orally from generation to generation.
English and some other languages
English and French are Canada's two official languages although there are several native languages and immigrant languages also.
Yes, linguists have traced the English language back to its roots in the Proto-Indo-European language, which is believed to have been spoken around 4500 BC. English is part of the Indo-European language family, which also includes languages like Spanish, French, and Hindi.
the languages pass on to diffrent generation and change over time.