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the languages pass on to diffrent generation and change over time.
because our languages share some common origins...
Yes...you can find them in some parts of Slovenia
Many Asian languages are not directly related, but some share common ancestry within language families. For example, languages like Mandarin Chinese, Japanese, and Korean are not related, while languages like Korean and Japanese share influences from Chinese. Meanwhile, languages within the Austroasiatic or Austronesian language families are related to each other.
Languages that are similar to Farsi include Dari and Tajik, which are both Persian languages and largely mutually intelligible with Farsi. Additionally, languages such as Urdu and Kurdish may share some similarities in vocabulary and grammatical structures with Farsi.
Most countries languages come from a archaic language that split into many other languages. Latin is used for the basis of Spanish, Italian, French, Portuguese and other romance languages.
Creolized languages are only spoken in a few countries. Some countries with no traditional creole languages are: North Korea South Korea Iran Saudi Arabia Israel Greece iceland denmark norway sweden finland
The Sami people speak Sami languages, which are a group of Uralic languages. There are several Sami languages, such as Northern Sami, Southern Sami, and Inari Sami, among others. These languages are primarily spoken in the northern regions of Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Russia.
The term "Bantu languages" refers to a group of languages spoken in Africa that share a common ancestral parent language. These languages belong to the Bantu language family and are spoken by various ethnic groups in sub-Saharan Africa.
If you mean, how Slovenian people live, well, they have a great life in Slovenia. Sure, there's some poor people and some rich people.
Both languages share the same alphabet, the Latin alphabet. But the two languages only share the following 13 letter shapes: A E I O U H K M N P R T W plus WH and Ng.
Some languages that are derived from the German language include Dutch, Afrikaans, Yiddish, and Luxembourgish. These languages evolved from different historical and geographical contexts, but have roots in the Germanic language family and share similarities in vocabulary, grammar, and syntax with German.