English languages family
Crossword Clue

  • We have found 14 answers to crossword clue "English languages family"
  • The Best Answer: 10/10
AnswerCrossword Clue
GERMANICEnglish language's family
germanicOf, relating to, or denoting the branch of the Indo-European language family that includes English, German, Dutch, Frisian, the Scandinavian languages, and Gothic
GERMANICBranch of languages including English
UGANDACountry whose official languages are English and Swahili
MALAWIChichewa and English are its two official languages
NATOMil. alliance with official languages of English and French
TAGALOGOne of two official Philippine languages, along with English
SINGAPORECountry in which English and Mandarin are official languages
weakestDenoting a class of verbs in Germanic languages that form the past tense and past participle by addition of a suffix (in English, typically -ed);contrasted with strong
barbarismA word or expression that is badly formed according to traditional philological rules, for example a word formed from elements of different languages, such as breathalyzer (English and Greek) or television (Greek and Latin)
barbarismsA word or expression that is badly formed according to traditional philological rules, for example a word formed from elements of different languages, such as breathalyzer (English and Greek) or television (Greek and Latin)
ablauts(in Indo-European languages) regular alternation in the internal phonological structure of a word element, esp. alternation of a vowel, that is coordinated with a change in grammatical function or combination, as in English sing, sang, sung, song;
apophony(in Indo-European languages) regular alternation in the internal phonological structure of a word element, esp. alternation of a vowel, that is coordinated with a change in grammatical function or combination, as in English sing, sang, sung, song;
ablaut(in Indo-European languages) regular alternation in the internal phonological structure of a word element, esp. alternation of a vowel, that is coordinated with a change in grammatical function or combination, as in English sing, sang, sung, song;