Finnish, perhaps.
it is not regular language .it is high level language
the second language is the language that one learns after ones native language,whereas target the language is the language of translation,situation or sitting in which reader needs to ude the language.
Machine language is a first generation language.
I guess you're trying to refer to Assembly language.
It is programming languages that are referred to in terms of "high level" and "low level".Extensible Markup Language(XML) is a markup language not a programming language, it is a data formatting specification that makes the presentation of data independent of programs (so that data can be passed between programs).For this reason the answer to your question is "neither".
Hauskaa Joulua
Finnish, it means Merry Christmas.
I believe this is Finnish. Hyvaa joulua translates to merry christmas. Finnish is the correct answer.
Hyvää Joulua (Hyvää is pronounced Hoover. Joulua is pronounced yo-ou-l-ou-a)
Hyvää joulua! (Merry Christmas!)
It's "Hyvää joulua" or "Hauskaa joulua". Happy New Year is then "Hyvää uuttavuotta".
Finland is the country that says"hauskaa joulua"on December 25.
todella hauska
"Hauska tavata!"
Hauskaa joulua
"Merry Christmas" is called "hyvaa joulua" in Finnish because "hyvaa" means "good" and "joulua" sort of means "Christmas". More specifically the word "joulua" means Yule in English. The term Yule or Yule-tide comes from an old Germanic midwinter festival (involving a sacrificial feast), that has absorbed into Christmas. Originally the festival was celebrated between late December and early January on a date determinded by the lunar Germanic calendar, but the festival was later placed on the 25th of December when the Christian calendar was adopted. The term is still used in the Nordic Countries to refer to Christmas. As in Finland they use the same term in countries like Norway, Sweden, Denmark and Iceland. In Finland they say "hyvaa joulua" (as you know); in Norway nad Sweden they say "god jul"; in Denmark they say "glædelig jul"; and in Iceland they say "gledileg jol". The term meaning the same thing ("good Yule/Christmas") in all these languages.
Merry Christmas / Happy Holidays