Most European languages belong to the Indo-European language family.
The Russian and Polish languages belong to the Slavic language family, which is a branch of the larger Indo-European language family. Russian is part of the East Slavic group, while Polish is classified under the West Slavic group. Both languages share common roots but have evolved separately, resulting in distinct grammatical structures and vocabulary.
Some languages spoken today outside of the Indo-European language family include Mandarin Chinese, Arabic, Swahili, Japanese, and Korean.
Romance
The Tswana language belongs to the Bantu group of the Niger-Congo languages, and makes up 80% of language spoken in Botswana
Arabic is not an Indo-European language because it belongs to the Semitic branch of the Afro-Asiatic language family. Unlike Indo-European languages, which include English, Spanish, and Hindi, Semitic languages have distinct grammatical structures, phonetics, and vocabulary. Arabic features a root-based morphology, where words are formed from consonantal roots, differing significantly from the inflectional patterns found in Indo-European languages. This fundamental divergence in linguistic characteristics is why Arabic is classified separately from the Indo-European family.
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.
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.
Armenian is the national language. It is in the Indo-European family.
German is a West Germanic language (along with English, Dutch and Frisian). The Germanic languages are part of the Indo-European family of languages.
It belongs to the Indo-European family of languages.
Almost all European languages belong to the Indo-European language family. This includes the Romance, Germanic, Slavic, and Celtic branches, among others. The second most prominent is the Uralic/Finno-Ugric family, which includes Finnish, Hungarian and Estonian as national languages as well as the Saami languages, Karelian, and many languages of Russia. The Basque language is a linguistic isolate, meaning that it does not appear to belong to any family. Maltese is an example of a European language of Semitic origin.
No, Aztec is not an Indo-European language. Aztec languages belong to the Uto-Aztecan language family, which is a separate language family from the Indo-European languages that includes languages such as English, Spanish, and Hindi.
I believe that English belongs to the language family of Indo European
The vast majority of European languages belong to the Indo-European language family, although most of the languages along the Baltic (Finnish, Estonian...) and Hungarian belong to the Uralic language family.
The English language belongs to the Germanic language family, which is a branch of the Indo-European language family. Other languages in the Germanic family include German, Dutch, and Swedish.
Sanskrit belongs to the Indo-European language family, specifically within the Indo-Iranian branch. It is one of the oldest documented members of this language family and has had a significant influence on many languages in the Indian subcontinent.
Turkish (which is Turkic), and Finnish, Estonian, Basque and Hungarian, which are loosely defined as Finno-Ugrian.Basque