Many languages originated from Indo-European roots because Indo-Europeans were the base of many languages like German, Spanish, English, Persian, and Sanskrit. Through cultural diffusion and migration, the languages got spread out over time. After being in different regions, the languages developed their own unique style and pronunciation, changing into the languages they are today.
I think you mean the indo-Europeans. The term 'Indo-European' refers in most cases to a group of languages with common linguistical roots, not so much to people. There are some 450 languages today with Indo-European roots, European languages like English, Spanish, German and Russian just being four of them. Almost half the people on this planet speak an Indo-European language. The "Indo"-part of the name is caused by the fact that several eastern languages, notably Indian and Iranian dialects and languages, have the same roots as most European languages.
Many languages originated from Indo-European roots because Indo-Europeans were the base of many languages like German, Spanish, English, Persian, and Sanskrit. Through cultural diffusion and migration, the languages got spread out over time. After being in different regions, the languages developed their own unique style and pronunciation, changing into the languages they are today.
Yes, Latin is an Indo-European language. It is the ancestor of the Romance languages and shares its roots with other ancient Indo-European languages such as Greek, Sanskrit, and Old Persian.
The Indo-European language family is believed to have originated from a single ancestral language spoken thousands of years ago in the Eurasian Steppe region. As populations migrated and diverged, different groups developed their own variations of the language, leading to the vast diversity of languages that exist today within the Indo-European family. This linguistic diversity can be attributed to historical factors such as migration, cultural exchange, and linguistic evolution over time.
There are hundreds of Indian languages in the Indo-European family, but here are five of them:HindiMarathiSanskritGujaratiSinhala
Yes it is. Urdu belongs to the Indo-Aryan branch of Indo-European languages.
Calvert Watkins has written: 'Selected writings' -- subject(s): Poetics, Indo-Europeans, Indo-European philology 'The American Heritage Dictionary of Indo-European Roots' 'Studies in Memory of Warren Cowgill 1929-1985' -- subject(s): Grammar, Indo-European languages, Congresses 'Indo-European Origins of the Celtic Verb (Celtic Grammar)'
Bhojpuri also known as bhojapuri, bajpuri, this language originate from indo-aryan and indo-european languages, but it has also great touch of magahi and maithilli languages, and it also knows as bihari language
Greek is an Indo-European language. But it has no known connection with any other family of Indo-European languages. The Indo-European language family appears to find its ultimate origins in the area of the present-day Ukraine. The original ancestor of the Indo-European language family is called proto-Indo-European. Its origins are somewhere east of the Greenwich Meridian and west of the International Date Line. In terms of continents, that's looking at Europe, Australia, Asia, and Africa as points of origin. Specifically, Greek appears to be traceable only as far back as the 8th century before the Christian era. The roots and stems to the words in the Greek vocabulary originate in their Indo-European language ancestors. But thus far the how, when, where, and why of that origination is unknown.
Armenian is the national language. It is in the Indo-European family.
there are 6,809 languages in the world and more than 5000 are non-indo-European....too many to list.
Germanic