Slavic
No. French, Spanish, and Italian are, as they derived from the ancient Roman language of Latin.
It belongs to the Celtic subdivision of Indoeuropean languages. It includes Irish, Scottish and Manx Gaelic, all separate languages. Welsh, Breton and Cornish belong to the other branch of Celtic.
The Indo-European is the broadest classification. The languages from the Italic Romance, Slavic, Germanic, and other language isolates like Georgian belong to this big family. So Russian, English, Spanish, Georgian, German are all Indo-European languages.
It belongs to the Indo-European family of languages.
One key difference is their linguistic roots: German belongs to the West Germanic language group, while Russian is a member of the East Slavic language group. This results in variations in vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation between the two languages.
No. French, Spanish, and Italian are, as they derived from the ancient Roman language of Latin.
SlavicThe Russian language belongs to the East Slavic family of languages. Its brother languages are Ukrainian, Belarusian and Rusyn. The East Slavic is part of the Slavic languages.It goes like this.- Indo European- Proto Slavic- Slavic- East Slavic- Russian
It belongs to the Celtic subdivision of Indoeuropean languages. It includes Irish, Scottish and Manx Gaelic, all separate languages. Welsh, Breton and Cornish belong to the other branch of Celtic.
The Indo-European is the broadest classification. The languages from the Italic Romance, Slavic, Germanic, and other language isolates like Georgian belong to this big family. So Russian, English, Spanish, Georgian, German are all Indo-European languages.
It belongs to the Indo-European family of languages.
One key difference is their linguistic roots: German belongs to the West Germanic language group, while Russian is a member of the East Slavic language group. This results in variations in vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation between the two languages.
Yes it is. More specifically it is a Slavic language from the Slavic-Baltic category of the Indo-Europeanlanguages.Other Slavic languages include: Ukrainian, Belarusian, Rusyn, Polish, Slovak, Czech, Serbian, Croatian, Bosnian, Macedonian, Bulgarian, Montenegrin, etc.Other Slavic-Baltic languages include: Latvian and Lithuanian.Other Indo-European categories include: Germanic languages, Celtic, languages, Italic languages, Indo-Iranian languages, and the Armenian, Albanian, and Greek languages.
Brahvi
The one that isn't French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, or Romanian.A few minor languages, mostly from places that neighbor a region speaking one of those, are romance languages too: Galician, Gascon, Catalan, Sicilian, etc.
Yes, Russian is an Indo-European language. It belongs to the East Slavic branch of the Indo-European language family.
German belongs to the Germanic group of languages (which also includes English, Dutch and the Scandinavian languages). This group belongs to the larger Indo-European group of languages.
Hungarian belongs to the Finno-Ugric language family which itself belongs to the Uralic languages. Hungarian is a very far relative of Finnish (it's told that similarities can't be more than eg between Russian and Spanish, both of these belongs to the Indo-European languages). As the name "Uralic" suggests, speakers of Uralic languages are from the area of the Ural mountain (nowadays it's part of Russia).