Those languages are all from different language families, but here is what they have in common:
Yes, they are, as is English.
they are all Indo-European languages
they learn English spanish German and Chinese and polish
Both Romansch and French are rooted in Latin.
German French and Polish have the following in common:They are all Indo-European languagesThey all use variations of the Latin alphabet for their writing systemsThey are all spoken primarily in European countries
There are 6 commonly spoken languages in Germany: German, Turkish, Polish, Serbo-Crotation, and Dutch. These are the common ones. There are many more.
The Related Link below shows the Indo-European languages and their development. The most common Indo-European languages are: Afrikaans Bulgarian Czech Danish Dutch English Farsi French German Greek Hindi Icelandic Italian Latin Norwegian Polish Portuguese Romanian Russian Slovak Slovenian Spanish Swedish Ukrainian Yiddish
The website 'BBC Active Languages' is about learning languages. One can learn languages such as Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Spanish, Polish and Turkish.
There are many, including English, French, German, Spanish, Italian, Polish, Czech, Hungarian, Romanian, Serbo-Croatian, Greek, Russian and many more.
"Yes the words Ge Fanuc is written in both French and German. As of 2007 Ge Fanuc's ifix 4.0 has become available in German, French, Polish and Russian languages."
Zamenhof was able to speak multiple languages, including Russian, Polish, German, French, and English. He also had a working knowledge of Hebrew and Latin.
I believe they are: Spanish, Italian and German 2nd answer: The main operatic languages are Italian, French and German. There have been Spanish operas, just as there have been in English, Polish, Hungarian, Russian and many other languages; but not as many as in the three main languages.