Swedish, Danish and Norwegian.
Danish and German are both Germanic languages, but they are not the same. They have different grammar, vocabulary, and pronunciation. While speakers of each language may be able to understand some words or phrases in the other, they are distinct languages.
Yes, many languages around the world have their own unique sign languages that are distinct from each other. These sign languages are used by deaf communities to communicate and are not universal across all languages.
Latin-derived languages - as their name suggest - have their origin in the Latin language, which falls under the Italic languages. English on the other hand (as German, Dutch and the Scandinavian languages) has its origin in the Germanic languages.However, both Italic and Germanic languages are connected to each other by both being part of the Indo-European languages.
No, animals do not communicate with each other using different languages like humans do. They use a variety of signals, sounds, and body language to convey messages and information.
Scandinavia is a region, not a country. It has no "official" language. The Scandinavian countries, with their official or national languages are: Denmark = Danish Norway = Norwegian Sweden = Swedish (Norwegian and Danish are dialects of each other, and Swedish is also very closely related).
Yes and no. Many languages, such as Chinese and English, have dialects that are so unintelligible to each other that they might as well be different languages, whereas Spanish and Portuguese are different languages whose speakers often can understand each other's speech.
Yes, Spanish and Portuguese speakers can generally understand each other to some extent due to the similarities between the two languages.
people can not understand each other!
Animals understand each other on there own because they use there own method of talk Singsoccerluv127
so they could understand each other during the trade process.
No, each of the Scandinavian countries has its own language, in Finland it is Finnish. The official languages in Finland are Finnish and Swedish, both of them and English are taught to everyone in schools (immigrants do not always have to study Swedish). In northern Finlands live populations of Sami people who have their own language which is officially recognized in Finland. The avarage finn is likely to understand basic English and most younger one are able to hold a decent conversation in English but not that many can do that in Swedish. Also, the other languages spoken in Fennoscandia are quite closely related and speakers of Swedish, Norwegian and Danish are able to understand each other quite a bit but Finnish is completely different and resembles Estonian.
The Rosetta Stone is a huge stone in Africa. On it was 3 different languages. The Rosetta Stone was used so that citizens could understand each other's languages.
How did cavemen understand each other
I think that languages unite the people in a culture because then they can speak to each other and make conversation they can also understand everything that the people are trying to tell each other.
The Yanomami speak a language called Xirinian. Between the villages some parts of the language differs but the people can understand and communicate to each other.
Spiders do not communicate with dogs as they cannot speak or understand each other's languages.
Oompa-Loompas speak an unusual language called "Oompa-Loompish," which is a mix of different languages. They predominantly communicate in this unique language, allowing them to understand each other despite their diverse origins.