No, it is a Romanic language derived from Latin. The appended language tree shows its roots.
No, Danish is not a Romance language. It belongs to the North Germanic branch of the Germanic language group. Romance languages are derived from Latin and include languages like Spanish, French, Italian, and Portuguese.
German is the odd language. French, Italian, Spanish, and Romanian have their roots in Latin. German is a Germanic language, with next to no ties to Latin.
Hungarian is not a Germanic language. It belongs to the Finno-Ugric language family, which is separate from the Germanic language group.
Yes, Swedish is a Germanic language. It belongs to the North Germanic branch of the Germanic language family and is closely related to languages like Danish and Norwegian.
Yes, Dutch is a Germanic language.
No, Danish is not a Romance language. It belongs to the North Germanic branch of the Germanic language group. Romance languages are derived from Latin and include languages like Spanish, French, Italian, and Portuguese.
German is the odd language. French, Italian, Spanish, and Romanian have their roots in Latin. German is a Germanic language, with next to no ties to Latin.
France. It's a combination of languages; mostly Latin, influenced by the Germanic language of the Gauls, by the Celtic of the people before the Gauls, and by the Germanic language of the Franks who replaced the Romans.
No. If anything, it caused the opposite. For example, England was native to Germanic people [Germanic language], later conquered by Romans [Romance language], later reconquered by Germanic people (Danes) [Germanic language], later conquered by Normans and French [Romance language], and reestablished as the state of England. Since England had been under Germanic control longer, Germanic influence is more widespread, which is why the English language is labeled as a Germanic language. However, you may have noticed large similarity between English and French. This is because when the French conquered England, the French language was introduced. English is truly a fusion of Germanic languages and French. English is a Germanic language and an indirect-Romance language. Some people mistake English for a Romance language because of the similarity between English and Romance languages. The same applies to all of Western Europe. Western Europe is split into two language regions: the Germanic north and the Romance south. The Romans controlled most of Western Europe for a thousand years and were more present in the south. Here, they maintained predominant influence and spread the Latin language, which gave birth to the Romance languages (French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, etc.). In the north, Germanic peoples maintained independence from the Roman Empire. They also conquered separate lands during the Roman Empire's reign, brought about the collapse of the Roman Empire, and later continued conquering. Here, they were able to maintain predominant influence and spread Germanic languages, giving birth to the modern Germanic languages (German, Swedish, Danish, Dutch, etc.).
Hungarian is not a Germanic language. It belongs to the Finno-Ugric language family, which is separate from the Germanic language group.
English has both Germanic and Latin roots. It has both Anglo-Saxon components (which provide the Germanic words) and French components (which provide the Latin words).
Yes, Swedish is a Germanic language. It belongs to the North Germanic branch of the Germanic language family and is closely related to languages like Danish and Norwegian.
Yes, Dutch is a Germanic language.
English is a Germanic language.
The English language is a Germanic base with vocabulary from Latin>French and has little influence from Gaelic in the vocabulary.
No, English is not a Romance language. It belongs to the Germanic language family, which is different from the Romance languages like Spanish, French, and Italian.
Yes. Danish is a Scandinavian tongue which belongs specifically to the North Germanic language group.