Yes, & it's famous for that.
No, Spanish is not a tonal language. Tonal languages use pitch to distinguish meaning, while Spanish relies on stress and intonation.
Yes, Burmese is a tonal language, meaning that the pitch or tone in which a word is spoken can change its meaning.
Yes, Khmer is a tonal language, meaning that the pitch or tone in which a word is spoken can change its meaning.
Yes, Thai is a tonal language, meaning that the tone or pitch at which a word is spoken can change its meaning.
Yes, Vietnamese is a tonal language, meaning that the pitch or tone in which a word is spoken can change its meaning.
No, Spanish is not a tonal language. Tonal languages use pitch to distinguish meaning, while Spanish relies on stress and intonation.
Yes, Burmese is a tonal language, meaning that the pitch or tone in which a word is spoken can change its meaning.
Yes, Khmer is a tonal language, meaning that the pitch or tone in which a word is spoken can change its meaning.
Yes, Thai is a tonal language, meaning that the tone or pitch at which a word is spoken can change its meaning.
Yes, Vietnamese is a tonal language, meaning that the pitch or tone in which a word is spoken can change its meaning.
No, English is not a tonal language. Tonal languages use pitch variations to distinguish meaning, while English relies more on word order and stress patterns.
Japanese is not a tonal language; rather, it has two pitches -- "high" and "low". Other and that, it does not use tones to distinguish words as in Chinese.
No, it is not. In fact, in all of Europe, only the following languages have tonal characteristics:SwedishNorwegianSerbo-CroatianSloveneLithuanianLatvianLimburgishLuxembourgish
messed up language jibber jabber
The Arabic language is the dominate language of North Africa and Southwest Asia.
No, it isn't. Arabic language is an independent language by itself.
Yes, the majority of Syrians speak Arabic as their native language. Arabic is the official language of Syria and is spoken by most of the population.