English, French, Spanish, Portugese, Irish, Scottish, Danish, Norwegian, Swedish, Finn, Russian, Japanese, Mandarin, Tartaric, Mongolian, Vietnamise, Tagalog, Arunta, Hindi, Urdu, Blackfoot, Gros Venture, Objibwa, Lithuanian, Estonian, Prussian, Slovakian, German, Italian, Macedonian, Greek, Latin, Turkish, Armenian, Kurdish, Sumerian, Aramaic, Arabic, Egyptian, Hebrew,
No. Both languages are from the same family (nordic Germanic languages) but they have different grammars, different vocabularies and different pronunciations. Danish and Norwegian are more simmilar, but also different.
Some words for "Moon" in different languages are: Spanish: Luna French: Lune Italian: Luna German: Mond Japanese: 月 (tsuki)
The term for words from different languages is "loanwords."
No, not all languages have nouns. Some languages, like verb-based languages, do not have a clear distinction between nouns and verbs and may use different word classes or sentence structures instead.
Some common translations for "orange" in different languages are: Spanish: naranja French: orange Italian: arancione German: orange Mandarin Chinese: 橙色 (chéngsè)
some are in latin, some in english, the periodic table of the elements is all different languages.
their are alot of diffrent languages no one knows some think there are hundred some think the are thousands but there might be millions of diffrent languages
There are about 450 Languages spoken in India and about 700 different Native American languages. But there is no such language as "Indian".
The Romanian language has some Greek words (as many other languages) but these two languages are extremely different.
No. Both languages are from the same family (nordic Germanic languages) but they have different grammars, different vocabularies and different pronunciations. Danish and Norwegian are more simmilar, but also different.
math
I can tell in some Indian languages, Hindi: Chunav, Urdu: Intekhab, Punjabi: Chon .
Some examples of the name "Earth" in different languages include: Spanish: Tierra French: Terre German: Erde Italian: Terra
This is different in different programming languages. Some character groups used in various languages to start a comment are: //, ;, !, /*, --, #, ', {, <!--, {-, etc. Some languages also require a character group to end a comment. Some older languages did not use character groups to mark comments but required them to appear in a certain place on every program line. There are endless variations in how commenting is done in computer programming languages.
Some words for "Moon" in different languages are: Spanish: Luna French: Lune Italian: Luna German: Mond Japanese: 月 (tsuki)
The Irish language is different to most languages, but there are some similar ones, like Scots Gaelic.
Creole is a category of languages that evolve from 2 completely different languages (usually French or English). It is not a religion.