Japanese
The word Indo-European refers to anybody who speaks an Indo-European language, and more broadly, anything connected to them. The Indo-European languages make up a family of related languages which are thought to be descended from a common ancestral language called Proto-Indo-European. There are about 11 major language families in the Indo-European family and they are: the Anatolian dialects (including Hittite) these are extinct; the Indo-Iranian language family including Sanskrit, Pali, Hindi and other languages of India as well as Avestan, Persian, Farsi and related dialects; Greek; Latin and the Romance languages (Italian, French, Spanish, Portuguese and Romanian); the Celtic languages including Welsh and Gaelic; the Germanic languages including English, German and the Scandinavian languages; Slavic languages including Russian; Baltic languages including Lithuanian and Latvian; Albanian and the Paleo-Balkan dialects (the last being extinct); Armenian; and finally Tokharian which is extinct. Many people believe that Indo-European also applies to a race or genetic group of people but it does not. People of any genetic group can speak any language.
English belongs to the Germanic family of Indo-European languages. Old English (also known as Anglo-Saxon) had two main dialects. The Anglic dialect gave its name to the language, but the Saxon dialect eventually evolved into Modern English. Along the way, English was heavily influenced, both in grammar and vocabulary, by Norman French, itself a Germanicized member of the Romance family of Indo-European languages. One great strength of English is its power of incorporating or borrowing words from other languages, particularly French, Latin and Greek, but the language itself is not derived from these or any others.Originals Celtic Germanic French, Borrowers Latin, Greek, and pretty well everything else to some small degree.There are more Native American words in English than Celtic words. The Celtic affect on English is negligible.
If you mean bastard, as in fatherless; then no... it is in the family language of the germanic - indoeuropean - japhetic trace of languages from the tower of babel. But it is becoming a "bastard" language in the sense that surely a great number of more than half of the people who speak it speak it as a second language, mainly pressured by business, colonization and cultural pressure.
a sub family is like your step bfamily or your foster family
English is a Germanic language.
romance languages
Some languages that are derived from the German language include Dutch, Afrikaans, Yiddish, and Luxembourgish. These languages evolved from different historical and geographical contexts, but have roots in the Germanic language family and share similarities in vocabulary, grammar, and syntax with German.
No, English and Punjabi are not in the same language family. English belongs to the Germanic branch of the Indo-European language family, while Punjabi belongs to the Indo-Iranian branch of the Indo-European language family.
Other Slavic languages; Byelorussian to the greater degree than other languages.
Tamil belongs to the Dravidian language family. It is primarily spoken in the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu and northern Sri Lanka.
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.
Yes it did. In fact, all languages that exist today developed from other languages. The language is derived from Common Celtic, a subdivision of Indo- European.
The majority of European languages are derived from the extinct language of Proto-Slavic. The languages that derive from this parent language are known as the Slavic languages, and are found in Eastern Europe. This includes the national languages of: Albanian Belarusian Bosnian Bulgarian Croatian Czech Macedonian Montenegrin Polish Russian Serbian Slovak Slovenian Ukrainian The Baltic languages (Latvian and Lithuanian) are sometimes included in the Slavic family by enlarging the title to Balto-Slavic languages. Their shared history is disputed, which is why they are sometimes left out of the Slavic group. In Western Europe, there are two main language groups: the Romance Languages and the Germanic languages. Romance languages are derived from the extinct language of Latin, which was the language of the Roman Empire. All these languages can be found in the southern portion of Western Europe. The national languages of this language family include: Catalan French Italian Portuguese Romanian (only Romance language found in Eastern Europe) Romansh Spanish Germanic languages are derived from the extinct language of Proto-Germanic, and can be found in the northern portion of Western Europe. The national languages of this language family include: Danish Dutch English* German Icelandic Luxembourgish Norwegian Swedish * - English is a recognized Germanic language, but many confuse it for a Romance language itself. This is because English is derived from the island of Great Britain. This island was first conquered by the Normans, and later by the French. The Normans brought about their Germanic languages while the French brought the French language (Romance). These languages have both influenced the English language greatly, although obviously the Germanic languages more so.
Languages are organsed into families. Languages in a family are related through descent from a common ancestral language or parental language, called the proto-language of that family.
Swahili is the most spoken language in the Bantu family of languages. It is spoken by over 100 million people primarily in East Africa as a first or second language.
Europe's languages and dialects belong to various language families, with the most common being the Indo-European language family. This includes languages like Romance (e.g., Spanish, French, Italian), Germanic (e.g., English, German, Dutch), and Slavic (e.g., Russian, Polish, Czech). Other language families present in Europe include Finno-Ugric (e.g., Finnish, Hungarian) and Turkic (e.g., Turkish, Azerbaijani).
A language family is a group of languages that share a common origin or ancestor. These languages have similarities in vocabulary, grammar, and syntax due to their historical relationship. Examples of language families include the Indo-European family, which includes English, Spanish, and Hindi, and the Sino-Tibetan family, which includes Mandarin and Tibetan.