What is the closest language to proto-indo-european?

what is the closest language to proto-indo-european?

Among the current languages?

Various Indian dialects and Lithuanian, I think.

Among old but well known languages? Hitite.

Lithuanian, then Latin. Greek Blanda upp'd with some indigenous language so it got muddled.
"No"

Lithuanian, Basque, possibly Nuristani. Basically anywhere that was isolated from other invaders for thousands of years

Greek is far closer to PIE than Latin or Lithuanian.

> Basque
Say what?

Peasant Lithuanian

How is Hittite not closer? It even kept the pharyngeal consonants.

It's grammar is extremely simplified compared to Greek and Sanskrit. It also has a very innovative phonology aside from retaining laryngeals.

French

>basque

It's Lithuanian.

Questions to non-slavic speakers of an indo-european language.

Do you consider slavic languages to be the least pleasant sounding of the indo-european languages, and to what level can you differentiate between them through sound alone?

I think that Lithuanian is the closest living descendant of PIE. Greek is probably also close to it and maybe some languages in India. Relatively speaking of course.

Lithuanian

>anywhere that was isolated from other invaders for thousands of years
>Lithuania

Czech is probably the least coarse sounding of them to my ears, but overall it's very hard to differentiate Slavic languages from one another if you don't speak any of them.

I mean, I can clearly hear a difference between Polish and Russian for example, but Slovakian and Slovenian? No chance.

t.Norwegian

Albanian, Armenian or Kurd

It is Lithuanian

Possibly Proto-Uralic, but that's just a theory.
Among the living languages, it is rural Lithuanian, like the others already said.
>Do you consider slavic languages to be the least pleasant sounding of the indo-european languages
There are no pleasant or unpleasant sounding languages. Slavic languages often have lots of consonants, sibilants and africates out the ass and a distinction between palatalized and "broad" consonants. It gives them a very specific flavor.
>to what level can you differentiate between them through sound alone?
I know can tell apart Polish, Czech and Russian, that's for sure. Polish is even bigger on sibilants than the other languages and has nasal vowels. In Russian, I can hear a lot of the palatalized consonants. Ukrainian, to me, sounds like a more colloquial form of Russian with less palatalization.
Serbian, Croatian etc. sound like Slavic languages with Italian intonation.
As for the other languages, such as Belarusian, Bulgarian, Slovenian etc. - I have no idea how they sound.

Basque?
I think someone drank too much bleach.

I mean, the real answer is "it depends what features you care about".

>latin
Said nobody ever.

>Basque

There not a Indo European language. That's there whole fucking shtick.

he talked about the languages,not people's primitivity

They say Lithuanian because it has the most noun cases but if you know the history of Lithuanian you know that baltoslavic lost a bunch of cases and regained a few only recently

This

>basque