They're just both two different languages. With different words, sounds, etc.
Italian is considered a "Romantic" language, whereas, English is a "Germanic" language.
Hungarian is not a Germanic language. It belongs to the Finno-Ugric language family, which is separate from the Germanic language group.
Yes, Swedish is a Germanic language. It belongs to the North Germanic branch of the Germanic language family and is closely related to languages like Danish and Norwegian.
Yes, Dutch is a Germanic language.
English is a Germanic language.
Germanic languages are a branch of the larger Indo-European language family. The key difference is that Germanic languages specifically include languages like German, English, Dutch, and Swedish, while Indo-European languages encompass a broader range of languages spoken across Europe, Iran, and the Indian subcontinent.
Yes. Danish is a Scandinavian tongue which belongs specifically to the North Germanic language group.
English is a West Germanic language that is part of the Germanic language branch within the Indo-European language family.
Italian is not a Germanic language, but an Italic language. The Italic sub-branch of Indo-European languages include all Romantic languages such as French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian and Romanian, which were derived from the ancient Italic language of Latin. Germanic languages are also a sub-branch of the Indo-European language family and include languages such as English, German, Swedish and Dutch. Despite Italian being an Italic/Romance language, there are some words of German origin such as fresco, brodo and sapone.
German is a west Germanic language. It is descended from the proto-Germanic language. For more information, see the links below.
Yes, English is a Germanic language. It has its roots in the Germanic branch of the Indo-European language family and has been influenced by other languages over time.
Yes, Flemish is a variety of Dutch spoken in Belgium. Dutch is a Germanic language, so Flemish, being a variety of Dutch, is also considered a Germanic language.