Neither. They both come from the same language. They developed into two languages later.
John Peter Zenger, a German immigrant, likely spoke German when he first arrived in America. However, he also would have learned English, as it was the predominant language in the American colonies at the time.
English didn't come from just one language family, it came from languages like: Latin, Greek, French, German, Saxon, Roman, and so on. It came from countries that invaded or otherwise had contact with England, such as trading partners and countries England colonized.
The English words "he came" are translated into "Yetsa" in African Luhya language.
The influence of Old English and the migration of Germanic tribes like the Angles, Saxons, and Jutes to England around the 5th century brought Germanic language roots into English. This influence can be seen in vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation patterns that persist in modern English.
Dachshund comes from the German Dachshund, literally, "badger dog," from Dachs "badger" and Hund "dog". Hund is also the origin of the English word hound.
No. Both English and German came from the same ancestor: Germanic.
From the German word Hamastra. The older English name for the animal was the German Rat
John Peter Zenger, a German immigrant, likely spoke German when he first arrived in America. However, he also would have learned English, as it was the predominant language in the American colonies at the time.
American came before English and our accent orignated of American
The English language came from German. Read up on the Anglo-Saxons invading the Celts. England used to belong to the Celts (Irish/Scottish) but then the Anglo-Saxons (the Germans) invaded. (This was before the English language.) They called their new land Angleland. Later, after they created the English language, they re-named it England.
It is Old English of Germanic origin, related to Dutch 'woord', German 'wort' and from Latin 'verbum'.
The official German language came into being as a result of Martin Luther's German Bible in 1534.
English didn't come from just one language family, it came from languages like: Latin, Greek, French, German, Saxon, Roman, and so on. It came from countries that invaded or otherwise had contact with England, such as trading partners and countries England colonized.
No; it was in the German language. The first kindergarten in the United States seems to have been one in Watertown, Wisconsin, in 1856. It was conducted in German because the founder of the "kindergarten movement," Friedrich Froebel, was from Germany and the first women he trained to teach kindergarten also spoke German (including Margarethe Meyer-Shurz, a German woman who came to America and began the kindergarten class in Wisconsin). The first English-language kindergarten was operated in Boston, beginning in 1860, by Elizabeth Peabody.
It depends on which colony they lived in and where they came from. Some spoke English, German, Dutch, French, Spanish, and other languages.
The English words "he came" are translated into "Yetsa" in African Luhya language.
The influence of Old English and the migration of Germanic tribes like the Angles, Saxons, and Jutes to England around the 5th century brought Germanic language roots into English. This influence can be seen in vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation patterns that persist in modern English.