Yes, Dutch is a Germanic language.
Yes, Flemish is a variety of Dutch spoken in Belgium. Dutch is a Germanic language, so Flemish, being a variety of Dutch, is also considered a Germanic language.
No, Dutch and Danish are not the same. Dutch is spoken in the Netherlands, Belgium, and Suriname, while Danish is spoken in Denmark. They belong to different language families - Dutch is a Germanic language, while Danish is a North Germanic language.
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.
German is the second most widely spoken Germanic language. (English is the most widely spoken Germanic language.)
English, German, Icelandic, Norwegian, Dutch, Afrikaans, Danish, Swedish, and others.
Yes, Flemish is a variety of Dutch spoken in Belgium. Dutch is a Germanic language, so Flemish, being a variety of Dutch, is also considered a Germanic language.
Germanic
No, Dutch and Danish are not the same. Dutch is spoken in the Netherlands, Belgium, and Suriname, while Danish is spoken in Denmark. They belong to different language families - Dutch is a Germanic language, while Danish is a North Germanic language.
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.
German is the second most widely spoken Germanic language. (English is the most widely spoken Germanic language.)
English, German, Icelandic, Norwegian, Dutch, Afrikaans, Danish, Swedish, and others.
German is a West Germanic language (along with English, Dutch and Frisian). The Germanic languages are part of the Indo-European family of languages.
"Hartelijke kerstgroeten" is in Dutch, which is the official language of the Netherlands and one of the official languages of Belgium. In English, it translates to "Warm Christmas greetings." Dutch is a West Germanic language that is closely related to German and English.
The language which is most similar to English is Dutch.
Modern English comes immediately from Middle English, the language of Chaucer. That derived from Old English or Anglo-Saxon, the language of Beowulf. That language, little more than a Germanic dialect, derived from Common Germanic, the common language of all Germanic languages (Dutch, Friese, German, Scandinavian...).
Dutch is a West Germanic language with about 20 million speakers mainly in the Netherlands and Belgium. There are small Dutch-speaking communities in northern France around Dunkerque and Dutch is also spoken in Aruba, the Netherlands Antilles, Suriname and in Indonesia. Dutch is a language, not a country.
The romans invented Dutch and Mexicans also speak this language. It is the native language of most of the population of the Netherlands. Mainly in western Europe and in other parts of the world where Dutch colonies existed. Aruba, Belgium, Curacao and Suriname. Afrikaans is spoken in South Africa. For written Dutch the alphabet is derived from Latin. It is estimated that there are 28 million speakers of Dutch. The language is from the Indo-European family, Germanic, West Germanic and Low Franconian.