What language did English directly borrow from? Appropriate
didnt you just answer your question??? \
What are the answer choices, please and thank you :)
no the answer is something like Latin
Latin Greek French Old French Middle English Old English High Middle German
wat are the answer choices
right there
where
\(\color{#0cbb34}{\text{Originally Posted by}}\) @darrionC no the answer is something like Latin \(\color{#0cbb34}{\text{End of Quote}}\) you cant give direct answers on this site! please refrain from doing so in the future. Thank you and enjoy QC!
oh nvm
I think you're correct, Darrion
me too
English was derived from Latin, the dead language. We know this because most of the words we use can be traced back to Latin Roots by certain suffixes and such
\(\color{#0cbb34}{\text{Originally Posted by}}\) @mxddi3 \(\color{#0cbb34}{\text{Originally Posted by}}\) @darrionC no the answer is something like Latin \(\color{#0cbb34}{\text{End of Quote}}\) you cant give direct answers on this site! please refrain from doing so in the future. Thank you and enjoy QC! \(\color{#0cbb34}{\text{End of Quote}}\) Also this is his post-- Lmao
in all honesty, the Enlglish language is formed up of more then just one language. English has been borrowing words from almost every language in the book since the beginning!
You're correct. But assuming this question doesn't have multiple answers, Latin would be the correct and main language.
some of them came directly from Latin, or through one of the Romance languages but some also from Italian, Portuguese, and Spanish; or from other languages (such as Gothic, Frankish or Greek) into Latin and then into English.
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