There are no languages that are derived from German. There is a set of languages called Germanic. German is part of this family.
Some languages that are derived from the German language include Dutch, Afrikaans, and Yiddish. These languages share similarities in vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation with German due to historical linguistic connections.
French.
Italian is not a Germanic language, but an Italic language. The Italic sub-branch of Indo-European languages include all Romantic languages such as French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian and Romanian, which were derived from the ancient Italic language of Latin. Germanic languages are also a sub-branch of the Indo-European language family and include languages such as English, German, Swedish and Dutch. Despite Italian being an Italic/Romance language, there are some words of German origin such as fresco, brodo and sapone.
Switzerland is the European country where French, German, and Italian are all official languages. Additionally, Romansh is also recognized as a national language in Switzerland.
Nearly all of the German population speaks German, as it is the official language of the country. Minorities may speak other languages, but German is the primary language spoken by the majority of the population.
There are no languages that are derived from German. To answer your question, all of them. Actually English is more like German than anything else. It is a really messed up language for sure but I liked to give German credit for most of it.
Some languages that are derived from the German language include Dutch, Afrikaans, and Yiddish. These languages share similarities in vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation with German due to historical linguistic connections.
No languages anywhere on Earth are derived from Spanish.In Spain there are several languages related to Spanish, but they are not derived from Spanish. They are all derived from Latin.
Pretty much all of the words in the English language were derived from European languages.
French.
Modern English comes immediately from Middle English, the language of Chaucer. That derived from Old English or Anglo-Saxon, the language of Beowulf. That language, little more than a Germanic dialect, derived from Common Germanic, the common language of all Germanic languages (Dutch, Friese, German, Scandinavian...).
Italian is not a Germanic language, but an Italic language. The Italic sub-branch of Indo-European languages include all Romantic languages such as French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian and Romanian, which were derived from the ancient Italic language of Latin. Germanic languages are also a sub-branch of the Indo-European language family and include languages such as English, German, Swedish and Dutch. Despite Italian being an Italic/Romance language, there are some words of German origin such as fresco, brodo and sapone.
The Romans only had one language, which was Latin. (Greek, but only for the highly educated) The present day languages that are derived from Latin are Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, French and Romanian. These are called the Romance languages because they are derived from the Roman language of Latin.
Yes it did. In fact, all languages that exist today developed from other languages. The language is derived from Common Celtic, a subdivision of Indo- European.
Switzerland is the European country where French, German, and Italian are all official languages. Additionally, Romansh is also recognized as a national language in Switzerland.
Nearly all of the German population speaks German, as it is the official language of the country. Minorities may speak other languages, but German is the primary language spoken by the majority of the population.
Germany, Switzerland, Lichtenstein, Luxembourg, and Austria all list German as a national language.