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My mother speaks Portuguese and it sounds similar to Spanish but I'm not quite sure of it's origin.

2007-04-22 08:40:39 · 9 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Languages

9 answers

Portuguese and Spanish both came from Latin; they are sisters, not mother and daughter.

2007-04-22 09:17:03 · answer #1 · answered by Doc Occam 7 · 4 0

certainly, this is not any longer a small section. learn the island of recent Guinea which has the utmost concentration of languages in the international. Europe has approximately 50 languages, however the island of recent Guinea has approximately 1000 languages in a close-by lots smaller than the part of Europe. The highlands of Ethiopia, the highlands of Nigeria and Cameroon, and the Andean foothills even have great linguistic variety whilst in comparison with Europe. so which you ought to ask why Europe has lots of languages in its section isn't the extraordinary question. The question is unquestionably why does Europe have so FEW languages for a close-by so great. To extraordinary a prior answer: ENGLISH isn't DERIVED FROM LATIN. i fall ill and uninterested in this falsehood. English is a Germanic language and is not any longer derived from Latin. listed under are the languages derived from Latin: French, Franco-Provençal, Provençal, Gascon, Catalan, Spanish, Aragonese, Mozarabic, Galician, Portuguese, Italian, Neapolitan, Sicilian, Corsican, Sardinian, Venetian, Dalmatian, Friulian, Ladin, Romansch, Romanian, Aromanian, Istro-Romanian. finding on the variety you slice the language pie, a number of those could be extra beneficial than one language, yet this record is an commonplace of the scientific lists obtainable.

2016-10-03 09:54:37 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Portuguese and Spanish are very close and normally mutually understandable.

Portuguese evolved from the medieval Galician-Portuguese language, which developed in the easternmost part of Iberian peninsula.

Galician-Portuguese is one of the romance languages that formed the dialect continuum in the peninsula.

Portuguese, Spanish, Galician, Asturian et al, derive from Latin, but have also some influence of Celtic languages (the people who inhabited the area before the Roman conquest), Germanic languages (Suebi and Goths, the people who conquered the peninsula from the Romans) and Arabic (who dominated the peninsula for 600 years).

2007-04-22 10:06:48 · answer #3 · answered by José 2 · 1 1

Portuguese, spanish, italian, french, romanian etc, are derived from latin, and as the romans invaded during the roman empire, also have some roots on ancient greek

2007-04-22 08:48:33 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Romance Languages: French, Italian, Castilian, Portuguese, Romanian, etc. (all of them from Latin)

2007-04-22 12:59:37 · answer #5 · answered by AlfaZulu 2 · 0 0

No. Both languages have their origin in upper Latin, opposed to French, which has its origin in lower Latin (vulgar, that is). So, Spanish is a more elegant language than French.

2007-04-22 08:48:10 · answer #6 · answered by azoocart 1 · 4 1

No, They all derived from Latin. So is French and Italian.

2007-04-22 09:16:33 · answer #7 · answered by Alex 2 · 0 0

No. They all came from Latin.

2007-04-22 08:47:19 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

latin!!

2007-04-22 08:44:29 · answer #9 · answered by dragn 3 · 0 0

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