Indo-European
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Introduction
The Indo-European languages comprise a family of several hundred related languages and dialects, including most of the major languages of Europe, as well as many spoken in the Indian subcontinent (South Asia), the Iranian plateau (Southwest Asia), and Central Asia. Indo-European (Indo refers to India) has the largest numbers of speakers of the recognised families of languages in the world today, with its languages spoken by approximately three billion native speakers.
Indo-European language families
- Albanian (4 languages)
- Armenian
- Baltic (3 languages)
- Celtic (7 languages)
- Germanic (53 languages)
- Greek (6 languages)
- Indo-Iranian (308 languages)
- Italic (48 languages)
- Slavic (19 languages)
Extinct:
- Anatolian (9 languages)
- Paleo-Balkans
- Tocharian
Indo-European languages in WikiVerb
- Afrikaans
- Albanian, Tosk
- Anatolian
- Aragonese
- Romanian, Macedo
- Asturian
- Avestan
- Belarusan
- Bengali
- Bosnian
- British
- Catalan
- Celtiberian
- Celtic
- Croatian
- Czech
- Dalecarlian
- Dalmatian
- Danish
- Danish, Sejerø
- Dutch
- Early Contemporary Swedish
- Early Modern Danish
- English
- Extremaduran
- Fala
- Faliscan
- Faroese
- Farsi, Eastern
- French
- Frisian
- Galatian
- Galician
- Gascon
- Gaulish
- German
- Germanic
- Gothic
- Hattic
- Hindi
- Hittite
- Icelandic
- Irish
- Romanian, Istro
- Italian
- Italic Languages
- Italo-Celtic
- Judeo-Alsatian
- Judeo-French
- Judeo-Greek
- Judeo-Iranian
- Judeo-Portuguese
- Judeo-Slavic
- Judeo-Tadjik
- Judeo-Tat
- Judeo-Italian
- Judeo-Provençal
- Jutish
- Ladino
- Latin
- Leonese
- Lepontic
- Ligurian
- Macedonian
- Romanian, Megleno
- Messapic
- Middle Dutch
- Middle English
- Modern Gutnish
- Mozarabic
- Navarrese
- Nedansiljansmål
- Noric
- Norwegian
- Norwegian, Wisconsin
- Norwegian, Nynorsk
- Old Dutch
- Old English
- Old Frankish
- Old French
- Old Frisian
- Old Gutnish
- Old Irish
- Old Latin
- Old Norse
- Old Spanish
- Orsamål
- Oscan
- Osco-Umbrian
- Osetin
- Phrygian
- Polabian
- Polish
- Portuguese
- Proto-Germanic, Eastern
- Proto-Germanic, Northwest
- Proto-Indo-European
- Proto-Norse
- Proto-Romanian
- Romanian
- Russian
- Rusyn
- Scanian
- Scanian, Older
- Serbian
- Sicel
- Slavic
- Slovak
- Slovenian
- Sorbian, Upper
- Spanish
- Swedish
- Swedish, Aiboland
- Swedish, Degerforsmål
- Elfdalian
- Swedish, Fasternamål
- Swedish, Finland, Older
- Swedish, Gamlakarleby
- Swedish, Gammelsvenskby
- Swedish, Helsingfors
- Swedish, Misiones
- Swedish, Närpes
- Ukrainian
- Urdu
- Venetic
- Vulgar Latin
- Vulgar Latin (Eastern)
- Yiddish
- Yola
Geographical distribution

Red: countries with a majority of speakers of IE languages Light-red: countries with an IE minority language with official status