European Day of Languages: Difference between revisions

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Visit the entries for "[https://musiclexis.com/index.php/Know know]", "[https://musiclexis.com/index.php/New new]", [https://musiclexis.com/index.php/Night night], [https://musiclexis.com/index.php/One one] and "[https://musiclexis.com/index.php/Star star]" in the MusicLexis dictionary. Look at the translations of the words into different European languages. What similarities do you notice?
Visit the entries for "[https://musiclexis.com/index.php/Know know]", "[https://musiclexis.com/index.php/New new]", "[https://musiclexis.com/index.php/Night night]", "[https://musiclexis.com/index.php/One one]" and "[https://musiclexis.com/index.php/Star star]" in the MusicLexis dictionary. Look at the translations of the words into different European languages. What similarities do you notice?





Revision as of 19:59, 24 August 2025

Visit the entries for "know", "new", "night", "one" and "star" in the MusicLexis dictionary. Look at the translations of the words into different European languages. What similarities do you notice?


Why do you think these words sound so similar across different European languages? What does this tell us about their history?


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proto-Indo-European_language https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indo-European_vocabulary


Listen to seven songs in seven European languages. Can you guess the language of each song? You will find the answer after each video. You can click the purple icon to visit the original entry in the MusicLexis dictionary.


If you could learn a new foreign language, which language would you choose?

Why is it useful to learn a new foreign language? Visit this lesson to answer the question.


MusicLexis Lessons