The east germanic language group
Yes, it was (it's an extinct language now), from the Eastern Germanic branch.
Hungarian is not a Germanic language. It belongs to the Finno-Ugric language family, which is separate from the Germanic language group.
English is an Indo-European language.It belongs to the West Germanic group of languages. Named after the Angles, one of the Germanic tribes that migrated to England,
the dinosaurs became extinct because the was kill of there family
West Germanic = German, Dutch, English, Afrikaans, Yiddish, Yola (extinct branch of middle English) North Germanic = Danish, Swedish, Norwegian East Germanic (extinct branch) = Vandalic, Burgundian, Crimean Gothic. See the links below for more information.
The term "Germanic" comes from the original language spoken by early Germanic tribes in ancient Europe. It refers to a branch of the Indo-European language family that includes languages such as German, English, Dutch, Swedish, and others. The Germanic languages developed over thousands of years through contact with other languages and cultures.
Yes, Germanic is considered one of the branches of the Indo-European language family that directly contributed to the development of English. English belongs to the West Germanic group of languages, which evolved from Proto-Germanic, itself a descendant of the original Indo-European language.
The state or process of a species, family, or larger group being or becoming extinct
Romano-Germany group of languagesGoing from least to most specific: Indo-European, Germanic, West Germanic. West Germanic is the most narrow sub-category, but in everyday usage, most people say they're both Germanic languages.
The Germanic family of languages originates from the Proto-Germanic language, which is believed to have developed in Scandinavia and Northern Germany around the 1st century AD. This linguistic group evolved from the larger Indo-European language family and includes languages such as German, English, Dutch, and the Scandinavian languages. Over time, the Germanic peoples migrated across Europe, spreading their languages and culture. The distinct characteristics of Germanic languages began to emerge around the early medieval period.
An ammonite is an explosive prepared from ammonium nitrate, or any of a group of extinct cephalopods of the family Ammonoidea.
I've never heard either term used to describe germans, most typically they seem to be called Prussians. Though, I may be wrong or out of date. Neither, Germans belong to the germanic group together with scandinavians, while the baltic peoples make up the larger balto-slavic family qwith the differetn slavic peoples. However the germanic group are divided into West germanic (germans, dutch and english) east germanic (dead, most famous were goths, vandals, burgundians etc.) and North germanic also referred to as scandinavian or nordic peoples. So germans are germanic but int the west germanic group not the north germanic one.