This question clearly refers to the Indian sub-continent, not to native American languages. Most modern languages and writing systems in Indian have evolved from Sanskrit.
The Indian constitution recognizes, for now, 18 official Indian languages. But, almost each of these 18 languages, include different dialects or variations of that language. Besides these 18 languages, there are other languages which are recognized by the central government, but not as official languages.
it was first written in ancient Hebrew an it is now written in almost every language in the world including most dead languages such as Latin.
Almost all indian languages are written from left to right, with the exception of languages that use Arabic-based writing, such as Urdu and Sindhi.
Indo European is the language that almost all European languages and some Indian (India) languages developed from. Latin developed from Indo European as did Greek and Spanish developed largly from Latin and Castilian (a language spoken in Castile region of Spain which also developed from this language).
Nothing. Consider the following points:There is no such thing as "Indian language."Sydney is pronounced the same in almost all languages, other than variations in accent.If you want to spell Sydney in one of the 455 languages of India, you'll have to specify which one you're talking about.If you want to know what the name Sydney means, click here.
Indian people talk in Hindi because it is the official language of India. India is the country with the people speaking different languages in different areas. It is known by almost every Hindu and therefore Indian people talk in Hindi.
In ancient times, Jews spoke Hebrew. From about 250 BCE to about 200 CE, the main language of the Jews was Aramaic. Since then, Jews have migrated to almost every country in the world, and they speak the local languages of the regions they live in. Today, most Jews speak English as their native language or as a second language. Hebrew is the second most spoken language among Jews.
You may learn some things about a language on the web, but it would be almost impossible to really learn a language.
Urdu is almost the same language spoken both in India and Pakistan.
Almost every countries in the world speak two language , one is their mother language and another is English (The international Language)
If you speak about the origin of the English language, yes it is a germanic language. The word "germanic" hasn´t much to do with "German". It describes almost all languages spoken in Europe next to the finnish-ungrish languages. The real origin of the English language is a mix of the early German languages (it was a variaty of languages in those days), Scandinavian languages, a bit latin from the roman time and Celtic.
Almost all of Lebanon's population is capable of speaking at least one language.