It's Polish
The dead giveaways for Polish are the z & s with dots over them, the slash through the l, and the hooks under the e.
2007-07-04 14:26:45
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answer #1
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answered by Taivo 7
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Well!!! A classical language, is a language with a literature that's classical— i.e., it will have to be old, it will have to be an impartial culture that arose customarily on its possess, no longer as an offshoot of one more culture, and it ought to have a huge and tremendously wealthy frame of old literature. How Tamil is classical? Claims concerning the "Primary Classicality of Tamil": a million. Lemurian foundation two. Phonological simplicity three. Catholicity . four. Tamulic substratum of the Aryan loved ones of languages. five. Morphological purity and primitiveness . 6. The presence of the phrases ‘amma’ and ‘appa’ in practically all high-quality languages in a few type or different. 7. Absence of Nominative case-termination . eight. Separability and value of all affixes . nine. Absence of morphological gender 10. Absence of arbitrary phrases eleven. Traceability of Tamil to its very foundation. 12. Logical and typical order of phrases . thirteen. Absence of twin quantity . 14. Originality and typical growth . 15. Highest order of the classicality . Classical Languages in India: a million. Tamil two. Sanskrit three. Kannada four . Telugu Classical Languages on this planet (rather then Indian): a million. Sumerian two. Egyptian three. Babylonian four. Hebrew five. Chinese 6. Greek 7. Latin * Though the primary 3 languages exitsed together with all 7, best the latter four together with Tamil and Sanskrit are known as as Worlds Classical languages
2016-09-05 14:55:26
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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It's Polish. Polish has more diacritic sings on vowels and consonants than any other Slavic language. Given its number of speakers worldwide (over 50 million), most translation sites on the Internet offer service in Polish.
2007-07-04 18:17:47
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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It's definitely Polish.
2007-07-06 07:24:53
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answer #4
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answered by Blackfire 6
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Confirmed as Polish. BTW, "Austrian" definitely isn't a language. They speak German there, albeit an Austrian dialect of it.
2007-07-04 13:40:46
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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It's definitely Polish. The sie gives that away.
2007-07-04 16:17:29
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answer #6
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answered by steiner1745 7
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It's Polish.
2007-07-04 13:31:03
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answer #7
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answered by Wren )O( 5
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It´s Polish, definitely, I am from Slovakia, so can tell easily. I can even understand parts of it - it says what to do if you haven´t received your password...
2007-07-04 21:29:34
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Austrian or Polish?
2007-07-04 13:25:31
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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Turkish or Russian
2007-07-04 17:51:15
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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