The order of languages as they appeared historically is typically thought to be something like:
Assembly language Fortran LISP COBOL ALGOL
The primary languages in order of number of native speakers are: Mandarin Chinese, Spanish, English, Hindi, Arabic.
No, not all languages rely on word order for syntax. Some languages, like Turkish and Japanese, rely more on inflection and case markings to convey the relationship between words in a sentence, rather than strict word order.
One key difference is the way they handle word order. Germanic languages, such as English and German, tend to have a more fixed word order compared to other Indo-European languages, which might allow for more flexibility in word placement.
the three main top languages in the world are English Chinese and Spanish in that order.
greek egyptian roman semetic pheonocian
greek egyptian roman semetic pheonocian
Assembly language Fortran LISP COBOL ALGOL
The primary languages in order of number of native speakers are: Mandarin Chinese, Spanish, English, Hindi, Arabic.
No, not all languages rely on word order for syntax. Some languages, like Turkish and Japanese, rely more on inflection and case markings to convey the relationship between words in a sentence, rather than strict word order.
The cast of Rhapsody in Two Languages - 1934 includes: Corey Thomson as Narrator
The cast of Languages of Heaven - 1998 includes: Lars Engstrom Naomi Kawaguchi Christopher Trunell
The cast of Body Languages - 2012 includes: Ry Cook as Guy Lindsey Gort as Girl
One key difference is the way they handle word order. Germanic languages, such as English and German, tend to have a more fixed word order compared to other Indo-European languages, which might allow for more flexibility in word placement.
the three main top languages in the world are English Chinese and Spanish in that order.
If you mean alphabetical, well, there are about six thousand languages at this point, plus many of those go by alternate names. If by native speakers, you can check out Wikipedia with "List of languages by number of native speakers."--------------------------------Kukisvoomchor, author "The Twelve Months of the Year in 850 Languages and Dialects"
Do you mean the four most popular languages in the world? That would be Mandarin Chinese, Spanish, English, and Arabic, in order.