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Are the languages of all countries different?

Many languages may have evolved from an ancestor. This idea was first put forward in 1786, although the similarity between Sanskrit and Italian was noticed as early as16th century. By 18 18, the Indo-European language family included more than 50 languages, and then 1854 included the unique Albanian language, and 1875 added Armenian language. In Europe today, only Finnish, Hungarian, Turkish, Basque (the border between Spain and France) and several languages of the former Soviet Union do not belong to the Indo-European family. In Asia, Indo-European languages appear in Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, India and Bangladesh. It is worth noting that although Hindi is the largest language in India, the indigenous people who speak non-Hindi are also very powerful. There are more than 150 languages in India, but less than 30% of people can't speak any language. So when 1947 became independent, it had to use Hindi and English as official languages at the same time-more than half of Indians did not know Hindi at all. Before the Indo-European invasion in about 1000 BC, Dravida (such as Tamil) and Munda spoken by local aborigines still accounted for a large proportion of the population in south-central India. Indo-European is spoken by most people in Pakistan and Bangladesh. They can all understand Hindi to some extent, but they can hardly understand each other. A Bangladeshi friend who studied law told me that he thought that apart from the geographical gap, the language gap was also an important factor when Pakistan and Bangladesh split into two countries twenty years ago. How similar are Indo-European languages? What is the difference between Indo-European and non-Indo-European languages? Let's look at the comparison of several "basic words": English moon mother new nose three Welsh mis mam newydd nos tri German Monat Mutter neu Nase drei Swedish Manad Moder Nyna "Satre French Moisme'. New Spanish is new, Italian is new, Russian is new, Greek is new, Persian is new, Sanskrit is new, Finnish is new, Hungarian is new and Turkish is new.

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