These include a wide range of lanuages, but NOT those spoken in the Far East. Please seek the link.
The language that is not an Indo-European language is Japanese.
The language that is not classified as an Indo-European language is Japanese.
Some languages spoken today outside of the Indo-European language family include Mandarin Chinese, Arabic, Swahili, Japanese, and Korean.
Most European languages belong to the Indo-European language family.
No. It is a member of the Japonic (or Japanese-Ryukyuan) language family, whose relation to other language groups is debated.
The language that is not an Indo-European language is Japanese.
The language that is not classified as an Indo-European language is Japanese.
Most of the languages of the world do not belong on the European language tree, such as all of the indigenous languages of Asia Africa, Australia and the Americas. This would include Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Hebrew, Arabic, Cherokee, Navaho, etc. There are also some European languages that are not on the European language tree, such as Hungarian and Basque.
Yes, linguists have traced the English language back to its roots in the Proto-Indo-European language, which is believed to have been spoken around 4500 BC. English is part of the Indo-European language family, which also includes languages like Spanish, French, and Hindi.
No, Japanese is not an Indo-European language.The Indo-European languages include most languages traditionally spoken in Europe (except Basque, Hungarian and Finnish), including all those derived from Greek, Latin, or both, and a number of languages in western and southern Asia (including Persian, Urdu and Hindi)Japanese is not apparently closely related to any language spoken elsewhere, except on nearby islands (Ryukyu Islands). Korean is also argued to be somewhat related to Japanese, and some linguists have hypothesized a more tenuous connection with the Altaic language group (which includes Turkish, most Central Asia languages and Mongolian).
Some languages spoken today outside of the Indo-European language family include Mandarin Chinese, Arabic, Swahili, Japanese, and Korean.
A foreign language is any language that is not your own. A European language is a language spoken in Europe.
Most European languages belong to the Indo-European language family.
A Japanese language school teaches Japanese (by definition).
No, Japanese is not an Indo-European language.The Indo-European languages include most languages traditionally spoken in Europe (except Basque, Hungarian and Finnish), including all those derived from Greek, Latin, or both, and a number of languages in western and southern Asia (including Persian, Urdu and Hindi)Japanese is not apparently closely related to any language spoken elsewhere, except on nearby islands (Ryukyu Islands). Korean is also argued to be somewhat related to Japanese, and some linguists have hypothesized a more tenuous connection with the Altaic language group (which includes Turkish, most Central Asia languages and Mongolian).
No, Semitic languages are not part of the Indo-European language family. Semitic languages belong to a separate language family that includes languages such as Arabic, Hebrew, and Amharic.
Depends of your background. If you are Chinese, you would find european languages difficult. If you speak an European language like English, then other European languages (French, Spanish) should be the easiest languages to learn, and languages using other alphabets (Chinese mandarin or Cantonese, Russian, Arabic, Hebrew, Japanese...) will present more difficulties.