true i think
Yes, scientists have traced the English language to the parent language known as Indo-European. This language is believed to have originated thousands of years ago and formed the basis for many modern languages spoken across Europe and parts of Asia.
English is commonly referred to as a mongrel language, in that it doesn't have on specific parent language, but has evolved over the years from many different languages.In geographical terms, Old and then Middle English were the languages spoken in much (though not nearly all) of Britain before Modern English (post-1470ish), Early Modern English being the oldest language that most people would be able to recognise as English.Old English was mostly a mixture of Celtic languages and Germanic languages, such as Saxon, which were brought to England by settlers; over time Britain was conquered by rather a lot of different cultures, introducing elements of Norman, Norse, Latin and French. Later on some words were brought back by English explorers from countries such as India and Africa, however these had quite small impacts compared to the others mentioned.In modern times, English has continued to assimilate parts of other languages. The effect of the British Empire spreading English to so many countries, and more recently of global communications such as the internet making English much more widely spoken, has been even more evolution in the language. American English has picked up bits from Spanish and Jewish languages, South African English has lots of Afrikaans elements to it, and so on.Despite all this, the "official" answer to your question is usually that English is a West Germanic language.
1. Indo-European 2. Balto-Slavic 3. Slavic 4. East Slavic 5. Russian This is the most accurate time-line of the Russian language that I know of.. I hope this is what you were looking for~! :D
The term "Bantu languages" refers to a group of languages spoken in Africa that share a common ancestral parent language. These languages belong to the Bantu language family and are spoken by various ethnic groups in sub-Saharan Africa.
parent conferences were held in english
Yes, scientists have traced the English language to the parent language known as Indo-European. This language is believed to have originated thousands of years ago and formed the basis for many modern languages spoken across Europe and parts of Asia.
if you mean what is the mother of English, it is Latin
In English, a female parent is called a mother.
German is the parent language of old English, which is fairly unintelligible with modern English. English had a lot of old French (which was very close to Latin) input during the Norman conquest, and is now a mix between the two language groups (romance and germanic).
European settlement in Australia began with the arrival of the First Fleet in 1788. The introduced language was English, and from that point, the Australian form of the English language began to evolve, and of course, the various Australian slang terms came emerged, often based on, or evolving from the parent English.
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Parent conferences were held in English
The correct phrase is expecting parent or expectant parent
English is commonly referred to as a mongrel language, in that it doesn't have on specific parent language, but has evolved over the years from many different languages.In geographical terms, Old and then Middle English were the languages spoken in much (though not nearly all) of Britain before Modern English (post-1470ish), Early Modern English being the oldest language that most people would be able to recognise as English.Old English was mostly a mixture of Celtic languages and Germanic languages, such as Saxon, which were brought to England by settlers; over time Britain was conquered by rather a lot of different cultures, introducing elements of Norman, Norse, Latin and French. Later on some words were brought back by English explorers from countries such as India and Africa, however these had quite small impacts compared to the others mentioned.In modern times, English has continued to assimilate parts of other languages. The effect of the British Empire spreading English to so many countries, and more recently of global communications such as the internet making English much more widely spoken, has been even more evolution in the language. American English has picked up bits from Spanish and Jewish languages, South African English has lots of Afrikaans elements to it, and so on.Despite all this, the "official" answer to your question is usually that English is a West Germanic language.
L. H. Ekstrand has written: 'Comparing psychocultural patterns' -- subject(s): Parents, Attitudes, Parent and child 'English without a book revisited' -- subject(s): English language, Foreign speakers, Study and teaching, Acquisition, Language, Children
They have an English and an Abyssinian parent.
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