Answers: * Albanian: familija * Danish: familie * Dutch: familie * Estonian:perekond * Finnish: perhe * German: familie * Greek: οικογένεια (oikogéneia) * Indonesian: keluarga * Italian: famiglia * Macedonian: фамилија (familija) * Maltese: familja * Polish: rodzina * Portuguese: família * Russian: семья (sem'ya) * Serbo-Croatian: породица (porodica) * Slovene: družina * Spanish: familia * Swedish: familj * Turkish: aile * Vietnamese: gia đình
in hindi, family is called "parivar".
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.
Other Slavic languages; Byelorussian to the greater degree than other languages.
The Germanic, Romance, Celtic, and Slavic languages are all branches of the Indo-European language family. Germanic languages are spoken in Northern Europe, Romance languages in Southern Europe, Celtic languages in Western Europe, and Slavic languages in Eastern Europe.
The Polish language family tree looks like this: * Indo-European languages * Balto-Slavic languages * Slavic languages * West Slavic languages * Lechitic languages * Polish language
Italian is part of the family of roman languages. Also part of this family are, spanish, french, portugeuse, romanic and retro-romanic.
There are hundreds of Indian languages in the Indo-European family, but here are five of them:HindiMarathiSanskritGujaratiSinhala
Spanish belongs to the Romance language family, which in turn is a branch of the larger Indo-European language family. Other Romance languages include Portuguese, French, Italian, and Romanian.
This is the Celtic family of languages. The modern Celtic languages are:IrishScottish GaelicWelshManxBretonCornish
A family of related languages can be refered to as being a linguistic branch.
English belongs to the Indo-European language family because it shares common linguistic roots with other languages in this family. This family includes a large group of languages spoken across Europe, Western and Southern Asia, and parts of Northern India. The classification is based on similarities in vocabulary, grammar, and syntax among these languages.
Armenian is the national language. It is in the Indo-European family.