The ancient Indo-European language of India is Sanskrit. It is one of the oldest known Indo-European languages and has been highly influential in the development of various languages in the Indian subcontinent. Sanskrit is also the language in which many ancient Indian texts, such as the Vedas and Upanishads, are written.
Sanskrit is an ancient Indo-European language, so it does not have a single discoverer. It evolved over centuries and was used in ancient texts in India. It is considered the oldest language in the Indo-European language family.
Yes, Hindi is an Indo-European language. It belongs to the Indo-Iranian branch of the Indo-European language family and is spoken by a large population primarily in India.
The Aryans wrote their poems and hymns in Sanskrit. Sanskrit is an ancient Indo-European language that was used in religious and literary texts in ancient India.
The language of the Vedas and Upanishads is Sanskrit. Sanskrit is an ancient Indo-European language that was used for religious and scholarly purposes in ancient India.
No, Chinese is not an Indo-European language. It belongs to the Sino-Tibetan language family, which is a completely separate language grouping from the Indo-European family that includes languages like English, Spanish, and Hindi.
No, Chinese is not an Indo-European language. It belongs to the Sino-Tibetan language family, which is a completely separate language grouping from the Indo-European family that includes languages like English, Spanish, and Hindi.
It bears a resemblence to Indo-European language, an ancient language which is considered to be a mother-language for all the contemporary European languages. It is strongly believed, that Lithuanian language has the highest amount of connections to the Indo-European language from all the European languages
Hindi
English, French, Greek, Latin, German, Italian, Russian, Spanish, and Persian are among many of the Indo-European languages. However, in India, the principle Indo-European languages include: English, Hindi, Gujarati, Bengali, Kashmiri, Punjabi, Marathi and Oriya.
Yes, Arabic is a Semitic language belonging to the Afro-Asiatic language family, not the Indo-European language family. Arabic is spoken by millions of people primarily in the Middle East and North Africa.
Indo European is the language that almost all European languages and some Indian (India) languages developed from. Latin developed from Indo European as did Greek and Spanish developed largly from Latin and Castilian (a language spoken in Castile region of Spain which also developed from this language).
Yes, it is. And since it has retained more or less its ancient form, indo-european scholars tend to study it with especial attention.
There is no Proto-Indo-European language group. Proto-Indo-European, or PIE, is the hypothetical root language from which Indo-European languages today (and others that are extinct) descend.
Indo-European is believed to have originated from a hypothetical ancestral language called Proto-Indo-European, which is thought to have been spoken thousands of years ago on the Eurasian Steppe.
Yes, Hindi is an Indo-European language. It belongs to the Indo-Iranian branch of the Indo-European language family and is spoken by a large population primarily in India.
Yes. Persian is an Iranian language within the Indo-Iranian branch of the Indo-European languages
We do not know the specifics, but since we know that Latin is an Indo-European language, it came about from the Indo-European settlers in the central Italic peninsula and the Latins adopted the alphabet from the nearby Etruscans.