About Czech Language
According to Wikipedia.org, Czech is also known as Bohemian. It is a West Slavic language of the Czech–Slovak group and is written in the Latin script. The language is spoken by over 10 million people and is the official language of the Czech Republic. The language is related to Slovak and is similar to Polish to a lesser degree. It is a fusional language and has a flexible word order. Its vocabulary is influenced by Latin and German. The Czech–Slovak group developed the language in the high medieval period. The standard Czech and Slovak in the Czech–Slovak dialect emerged in the early modern period. In the 18th and -19th centuries, the modern context of the language emerged. The Moravian dialects of Czech are spoken in the eastern part of the country. Czech comprises ten monophthongs, three diphthongs, and 25 consonants. The Czech words contain complicated consonant clusters but lack vowels. Czech is represented by the grapheme ř and has a simple orthography.
About Lao Language
According to Wikipedia.org, Lao is referred to as Laotian. It is a Kra–Dai language and is spoken by the Lao people. It is spoken in Laos and is the official language of 7 million people. It is also spoken in northeast Thailand and is spoken by 23 million people. It is referred to as Isan. The language is lingua franca and is common among the citizens of Laos. It is an analytic language and is similar to the Kra-Dai language. The language is also similar to Chinese and Vietnamese. It is spoken along with Thai and Isan and is spoken by fellow Southwestern Tai languages. Lao is spoken effectively among its native speakers and is used to communicate with one another. These languages are written with different scripts and are linguistically similar to the dialect continuum.