Yes, tens of thousands of languages. You used one of them (English) to ask your question.
Euxapiotw is Greek; it means 'thank you'. In Greek symbols/letters, it actually looks like this: Ευχαριστώ (which sounds like 'efharesto'.)
In the Dakota language, "tirospare" does not have a known meaning. It is possible that the word may be misspelled or not exist in the Dakota language.
There are seven coordinating conjunctions in the English language: for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so.
No, "jandra" is not a French word. It does not exist in the French language.
Language variation refers to the differences in language use among speakers based on factors such as region, social background, education, and age. This variation can be seen in differences in vocabulary, pronunciation, syntax, and other linguistic features. Studying language variation helps linguists understand how and why languages change over time and across different communities.
They do not exist.
The language is dead. Hebrew is a language evolved from it. Descendants of the people who spoke it still exist.
There is no such thing as gay language.
Euxapiotw is Greek; it means 'thank you'. In Greek symbols/letters, it actually looks like this: Ευχαριστώ (which sounds like 'efharesto'.)
good bye is ciaoendemena means "how are you" to a male endemenesh mean "how are you" to a female and actually in Ethiopia they speak Amharic the "ethiopian language" doesn't exist
Yes, swahili culture and language exist in Africa today.
The Assyrian language as you call it does not exist. The Ancient Assyrians are extinct and the language they spoke was Akkadian. The people that call themselves Assyrian today are actually of Aramean heritage and the language they all speak is forms of Aramaean/Aramaic and nothing else.
yes
Actually quarks can exist freely.
no.
This word does not exist in the English language!
No