Most languages not in Europe. Finnish, Estonian and Hungarian and other Uralic languages are not indo European languages in origin. Persian, and languages developed from Sanskrit (ie Hindi, Urdu, Bengali, punjabi etc.) ARE indo-European. Maltese is not. Telugu, Kannada, and Tamil are Indian languages that are Dravidian, not related to Sanskrit. You weren't very specific so this is the best I can do, sorry.
No, they do not!Definitely not. If there was a single place of origin it would have been somewhere in Africa.
No, in Spain the language is Spanish, and in Portugal the language is Portuguese. They are similar languages. May be that both have a common origin, but each country has its own language, history and customs.
Romance language all originated from Latin.
No, they do not!Definitely not. If there was a single place of origin it would have been somewhere in Africa.
Godoy is a name of Galician origin, indicating the person is from Godoy, a place in Galicia. The word may have roots in one of the Gothic languages.
Kannada language originated from the Dravidian family of languages around 2500 years ago in the region that is now known as Karnataka, India. It has a rich literary tradition and is one of the oldest languages in India with a significant body of literature.
Dayanna is a female-baby name from Indoeuropean origin. It's basically a derivative of the name 'Diana', and it's used mostly in English-speaking countries.
Indo-European paganism is any form of paganism (roughly, polytheistic religion) of people who speak Indo-European languages, which include Sanskrit and the languages of India, Avestan and the languages of Persia, Greek, Latin, and Celtic languages, Germanic, Slavic and Baltic languages, Albanian and Armenian. For more information see <A HREF="http://pierce.yolasite.com/">Proto-Indo-European religion</A>.
Indoeuropean meaning is light, or deity.
Gaelic refers to a group of related languages spoken predominantly in Ireland and Scotland. The main Gaelic languages are Irish Gaelic (Gaeilge) spoken in Ireland and Scottish Gaelic (Gàidhlig) spoken in Scotland. These languages belong to the Celtic language family.
No, they do not!Definitely not. If there was a single place of origin it would have been somewhere in Africa.
No, in Spain the language is Spanish, and in Portugal the language is Portuguese. They are similar languages. May be that both have a common origin, but each country has its own language, history and customs.
Romance language all originated from Latin.
The Romanian language is a language of Latin (Romanic) origin; the most part of the vocabulary is of Latin origin.
Brian Stross has written: 'The origin and evolution of language' -- subject(s): Language and languages, Origin
The origin of a word indicates the language the word originally came from, or the languages certain parts (such as prefixes and suffixes) come from.
No, they do not!Definitely not. If there was a single place of origin it would have been somewhere in Africa.