The answer to your question is INTERLINGUE (i THINK)
CHRIS JENNINGS New Answer: Esparanto.
Interlingua is an artificial language based on English and Romance languages. It was developed in the mid-20th century with the goal of being easily understood by speakers of those languages.
Interlingua is an artificial language created in the mid-20th century that is based on words common to English and the Romance languages (such as French, Spanish, Italian, and Portuguese). It was designed to be easily understood by speakers of these languages without having to learn a new, complex grammar system.
Latin is the base language for the Romance languages, which include Spanish, French, Italian, Portuguese, and Romanian. These languages developed from Latin after the fall of the Roman Empire.
A constructed language blending features of English and Romance languages could involve using a simplified grammar structure akin to English with vocabulary drawn from languages like French, Spanish, Italian, and Portuguese. This hybrid language might prioritize cognates and phonetic similarities to enhance ease of learning for speakers of both language families, while potentially incorporating unique features to foster communication and understanding between users of various linguistic backgrounds.
Romance languages developed from the Latin language in Europe.
No, German is not a Romance language. It belongs to the Germanic branch of the Indo-European language family, along with English and Dutch, while Romance languages like French, Spanish, and Italian evolved from Latin.
Interlingua is an artificial language created in the mid-20th century that is based on words common to English and the Romance languages (such as French, Spanish, Italian, and Portuguese). It was designed to be easily understood by speakers of these languages without having to learn a new, complex grammar system.
English language
I think you are asking about ESPERANTO
No, German is not a romance language. It belongs to the Germanic language family, along with English, Dutch, and Swedish. Romance languages are derived from Latin and include languages like Spanish, French, and Italian.
Latin is the base language for the Romance languages, which include Spanish, French, Italian, Portuguese, and Romanian. These languages developed from Latin after the fall of the Roman Empire.
A constructed language blending features of English and Romance languages could involve using a simplified grammar structure akin to English with vocabulary drawn from languages like French, Spanish, Italian, and Portuguese. This hybrid language might prioritize cognates and phonetic similarities to enhance ease of learning for speakers of both language families, while potentially incorporating unique features to foster communication and understanding between users of various linguistic backgrounds.
Roman Catholic, English, French
The Phoenicians are credited with the invention of the alphabet used for the English language and other Romance languages.
romance languages
Romance languages developed from the Latin language in Europe.
English, French, Arabic, Russian, Spanish & Chinese are the official languages in the UN.
"Romance" means, in this instance, "based on Latin, the language of the Romans," so yes, all Romance Languages are branches of the same trunk. In addition, some languages own much of their vocabulary to Latin or to another Romance Language, though they are classified as members of another family. English is one such. It's a Germanic language, but almost half of its words are from Latin.