Lithuanian
Answer:
The previous answer is completely wrong. There is know way to know what oldest indo-European language is, because spoken language has existed for hundreds of thousands of years, possibly even up to 1 million years, whereas written language has only been shown to exist for about 5,000 years.
Yes, linguists have traced the English language back to its roots in the Proto-Indo-European language, which is believed to have been spoken around 4500 BC. English is part of the Indo-European language family, which also includes languages like Spanish, French, and Hindi.
The Welsh language is one of the oldest languages in Europe, with origins dating back over 1,400 years. It is a Celtic language with a rich history and cultural significance in Wales. However, it is not the oldest language in the world, as there are languages that have been spoken for much longer periods of time.
Aramaic is an ancient Semitic language that dates back several thousand years, but it is not considered the oldest language in the world. Languages like Sumerian, Egyptian, and Sanskrit are among the oldest known languages with detailed records of their usage in ancient texts and inscriptions.
Research done in India is generally very inaccurate. It is true in any developing world. All the Indian languages have their origin in Sanskrit, a IndoEuropean language. Kannada is a more complete and classical language unlike Tamil which lacks even basic letters like 'ha' in its alphabet. Telugu script has its origin in Kannada. So do Konkani and Tulu languages.
The language of the Rigveda is Vedic Sanskrit. It is one of the oldest Indo-European languages and is the language in which the hymns of the Rigveda, one of the oldest sacred texts of Hinduism, were composed.
As my knowledge the tamil is oldest language among dravidian language
Tamil is considered to be the oldest language with current
Indoeuropean meaning is light, or deity.
The oldest word in the English language is town.
sanskrit is the oldest language and it is still in use in HINDI rituals
tamil language
Telugu..!
The Italic family, which includes Latin, Spanish, French, Italian, Portuguese, Romanian, Catalan, Occitan, Galician, Ladino, Romansch, and several others.
If you mean bastard, as in fatherless; then no... it is in the family language of the germanic - indoeuropean - japhetic trace of languages from the tower of babel. But it is becoming a "bastard" language in the sense that surely a great number of more than half of the people who speak it speak it as a second language, mainly pressured by business, colonization and cultural pressure.
No. Sanskrit is older; probably the oldest.
Mostly all of us in Europe are from Indoeuropean language group, so its barely the same. english / slovak / german Brother - Brat - Bruder Sister - Sestra - Schwester
Tamil