German is not a Latin based language. German is a West Germanic language German is not a Latin based language because it is not a romance language. A Romance language is a language that is derived directly from Latin. They inlude Italian, Romanian, Spanish, Portuguese, and French. German does, however, have some words from Latin because the Germanic tribes interacted with the Latin speaking peoples when they overthrew Rome. However, the great majority of Latin words in German were adopted from the time of the Renaissance onwards. English is also a Germanic language. Many similarities can be seen between German and English, espcially with cognates. Sometimes, words only differ with a couple of letters. Haus...House Maus...Mouse Hund...Dog (Hound) There is a school of thought that says, by replacing German letter combinations with English letter combinations, you often come up with German words. See the examples above ("u" and "au" for the English "ou"). Although, this isn't always true, very often it works.
No, German is not a Latin-based language. It belongs to the Germanic branch of the Indo-European language family, while Latin is an Italic language that belongs to the Romance branch of the Indo-European language family.
No. Latin is an Indo-European language, and so is
German, so they are related (compare their words for "father": "pater"- Latin and "vater" - German), but they're different branches on the same tree, so to speak. Latin or Romance languages are: Portugeuse, Spanish, French, Romanian, Italian and some others. Germanic languages are German, Dutch, Norwegian, Swedish, Danish, Frisian and English.
German is not based on Latin. German is a West Germanic language that developed from Proto-Germanic, while Latin is an Italic language that gave rise to the Romance languages like French, Spanish, and Italian. The two languages have different linguistic roots and histories.
The Spanish language is based off of the Latin language.
German is the odd language. French, Italian, Spanish, and Romanian have their roots in Latin. German is a Germanic language, with next to no ties to Latin.
German/Latin/Dutch
No, German is the language currently spoken in Germany and Austria for example. Latin was the language of the Romans. It is not spoken anymore and only studied for academic purposes.
The language of ancient Rome was Latin. English is an evolved language based on Latin, German, Spanish, Gaelic, French, and numerous colloquialisms.
German is not based on Latin. German is a West Germanic language that developed from Proto-Germanic, while Latin is an Italic language that gave rise to the Romance languages like French, Spanish, and Italian. The two languages have different linguistic roots and histories.
The Spanish language is based off of the Latin language.
Yes, the Romanian language is based on Latin and is the only country in Eastern Eastern that uses a Latin-based language.
John C. Traupman has written: 'New College German and English Dictionary' -- subject(s): German, German language, Dictionaries, English language, English 'Conversational Latin for oral proficiency' -- subject(s): Colloquial Latin language, Conversation and phrase books, Latin language, Latin language, Colloquial 'Latin is fun' 'The new international Webster's German & English dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, German, German language, English language, English 'Lingua Latina' -- subject(s): Latin language, Grammar
German is the odd language. French, Italian, Spanish, and Romanian have their roots in Latin. German is a Germanic language, with next to no ties to Latin.
Yes, Romanian is a Latin language.
Roman Catholicism is a branch of Christianity, not a language. So, no it isn't a latin based language.
German/Latin/Dutch
Yes, Portuguese is a Latin language. It belongs to the Romance language family, which evolved from Latin, the language of the Roman Empire.
German is not heavily rooted in Latin, as it belongs to the Germanic branch of the Indo-European language family. However, German has borrowed vocabulary from Latin over the centuries, especially in fields like science, religion, and law.
No, German is the language currently spoken in Germany and Austria for example. Latin was the language of the Romans. It is not spoken anymore and only studied for academic purposes.