It is not. Latin is an Italic language. Both the Germanic and the Italic language groups come from a common ancestor called Indo European. Although they share a common ancestor, they developed into different languages because they were so far apart from each other.
No. The language is Germanic.
English is a Germanic language with significant influence from Latin due to historical interactions with the Roman Empire and later through the Norman Conquest.
English is a Germanic language (West Germanic, closely related to German and Dutch) that draws heavily on Romance languages for it's upper stratum vocabulary. It's primary vocabulary is 95% Germanic.
No, it is classified by linguists as a Germanic language.
English has both Germanic and Latin roots. It has both Anglo-Saxon components (which provide the Germanic words) and French components (which provide the Latin words).
No, Danish is not a Romance language. It belongs to the North Germanic branch of the Germanic language group. Romance languages are derived from Latin and include languages like Spanish, French, Italian, and Portuguese.
English is part of the Germanic language family, more precisely, of the West Germanic family, along with German, Dutch, Afrikaans, Frisian, and Yiddish. Latin is part of the Italic family. The Italic and the Germanic are branches of a larger family of languages commonly known as Indo-European or Indo-Germanic.
No, French is a Romance language, which developed from Latin. Germanic languages, on the other hand, are a separate branch of the Indo-European language family that includes languages like German, English, and Dutch.
The Germanic rulers adopted Latin Language, Roman Laws and Christianity.
It never did. English is a language that came from the germanic tribes,the angels,saxon and jutes
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.
France. It's a combination of languages; mostly Latin, influenced by the Germanic language of the Gauls, by the Celtic of the people before the Gauls, and by the Germanic language of the Franks who replaced the Romans.