Most European languages are part of one of the three Indo-European language families: Romance languages (developed from the Latin spoken in the Roman Empire), German (spoken pre-German language developed in the southern part of Scandinavia), Slavic languages (developed the old Slavic language spoken in Ukraine present).
Romance languages are spoken, constantly, in South-West and West, in countries such as France, Belgium, Spain, Portugal, Andorra, Italy, Switzerland, but also in Romania, Moldova, in some regions of Serbia, Macedonia and Greece. There is also an important Italian and Portuguese diaspora in Germany, Switzerland etc.
Germanic languages are spoken, especially in Central, North-West and North (Germany, Austria, Switzerland, northeastern Italy, north-eastern France, the Netherlands and Scandinavia and also in Britain and Ireland and the German minority and some members of the Hebrew communities which survived in various countries on the continent).
Slavic languages are used in Central and Eastern Europe - Poland, Czech Republic and Slovakia, some areas of eastern Germany, Russia, Baltic countries, Ukraine, Belarus and South-East - the countries of former Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, minority in northern Greece, Hungary, Romania and Moldova, the Caucasus countries and the diaspora Yugoslav, Polish, Ukrainian and Russian in Germany, France, Belgium, Sweden and other Western countries.
Which Languages are Spoken in Europe
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