No, Russian is a Slavonic language.
German is the odd language. French, Italian, Spanish, and Romanian have their roots in Latin. German is a Germanic language, with next to no ties to Latin.
German/Latin/Dutch
No. German has a few words that have Latin origins, but since it is not a Romance language, the Latin influences are not common.
No, German is the language currently spoken in Germany and Austria for example. Latin was the language of the Romans. It is not spoken anymore and only studied for academic purposes.
No, Russian is a Slavonic language.
For example English, German, Dutch, Arabic, Swahili, any Native American language, Basque, Russian, Greek, etc, etc.
John C. Traupman has written: 'New College German and English Dictionary' -- subject(s): German, German language, Dictionaries, English language, English 'Conversational Latin for oral proficiency' -- subject(s): Colloquial Latin language, Conversation and phrase books, Latin language, Latin language, Colloquial 'Latin is fun' 'The new international Webster's German & English dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, German, German language, English language, English 'Lingua Latina' -- subject(s): Latin language, Grammar
German is the odd language. French, Italian, Spanish, and Romanian have their roots in Latin. German is a Germanic language, with next to no ties to Latin.
Esperanto refers to an auxillary language that was created in the nineteenth century. The language uses words from a mixture of languages including Russian, Latin and German.
German/Latin/Dutch
No it is a mixture of Greek, Russian, and Turkey
No. German has a few words that have Latin origins, but since it is not a Romance language, the Latin influences are not common.
Italian2nd answerThe most common are Italian, French, German, Russian and English, but there are operas in many other languages too. Opera is an art-form, and it can be written in any language the composer wants.
No, German is the language currently spoken in Germany and Austria for example. Latin was the language of the Romans. It is not spoken anymore and only studied for academic purposes.
German
No. French, Spanish, and Italian are, as they derived from the ancient Roman language of Latin.