Galician is a Romance language; i.e., it derives from Latin.
No, Galician is spoken in a region of Spain. Scots generally speak English and some also speak Scottish Gaelic.
No, Galician is a language spoken in the region of Galicia in Spain, while Gaelic refers to a group of Celtic languages spoken in Ireland and Scotland, including Irish Gaelic and Scottish Gaelic. These are distinct languages with different origins and linguistic characteristics.
Yes it is? I had to research it for this test I'm taking online.
Galician is spoken in the region of Galicia, located in the northwest of Spain. Basque is spoken in the Basque Country, an autonomous community in northern Spain, as well as in parts of southwestern France.
"Hello" in Galician is "Ola".
No, Galician is spoken in a region of Spain. Scots generally speak English and some also speak Scottish Gaelic.
At that time Galician-Portuguese (Galicia's native language) was the language of the overwhelming majority of the population. However, Spanish was the only official language, although it was only spoken fluently and as a first language by small minorities in urban areas.
The extreme northwest corner of Spain is called Galicia. Tbe official language is Spanish and I feel comfortable saying everyone can use Spanish. However, they do have their own language called Galician, or Gallego, which they use orally. Wikipedia states "Modern Galician and modern Portuguese are descended from a single Latin-derived language which linguists today call Galician-Portuguese or Mediaeval Galician or Old Portuguese. This common ancestral language was spoken in the territories of the mediaeval Kingdom of Galicia."
A person from the Spanish autonomous territory of Galicia is a "Galician" in English, Galego (masculine) or Galega (feminine) in Galician language. A person from the former Austrian province of Galicia (Galizien in German) is a "Galician" in English or a "Galitzianer" in German or Yiddish.
Johannes Kabatek has written: 'Die Sprecher als Linguisten' -- subject(s): Galician language, Interference (Linguistics), Languages in contact, Spoken Galician
No, Galician is a language spoken in the region of Galicia in Spain, while Gaelic refers to a group of Celtic languages spoken in Ireland and Scotland, including Irish Gaelic and Scottish Gaelic. These are distinct languages with different origins and linguistic characteristics.
Its in Galician the romance language of Galicia in northwestern Spain, closely related to Portuguese.
Most people in Galicia speak both Galician (Galego in Galician), the natural language of Galicia ,and Spanish.
Yes it is? I had to research it for this test I'm taking online.
From ancestry.com : Spanish, Catalan, Portuguese, Galician, and Italian (Sardinian): occupational name for a painter, from pintor 'painter'.
Galician is spoken in the region of Galicia, located in the northwest of Spain. Basque is spoken in the Basque Country, an autonomous community in northern Spain, as well as in parts of southwestern France.
They are known to be originate from aryans and the language from which Hindi originate is Devnagri