The West Slavonic Branch consists of the dead languages Old Bohemian and Pelabian, and the living languages of Poland, Bohemian (Slovakian), and Lusatia.
The Teutonic Class consists of three branches: High-German, Low-German, and Scandinavian.
The High-German Branch consists of the dead languages Middle High-German Old High-German, and the living language of Germany.
The Low-German Branch consists of the dead languages Gothic, Anglo-Saxon, Old Dutch, Old Friesian, and Old Saxon, and the living languages of England, Holland, Friesland, and North of Germany (Platt-Deutsch).
The Scandinavian Branch consists of the dead language Old Norse, and the living languages of Denmark, Sweden, Norway, and Iceland.
No. 2. Genealogical Table of the Semitic Family of Languages.
The Semitic Family Family consists of three Classes: the Arabic or Southern, the Hebraic or Middle, and the Aramaic or Northern.
The Arabic or Southern Class consists of the dead languages Ethiopic and the Himyaritic Inscriptions, and the living languages of Arabic and Amharic.
The Hebraic or Middle Class consists of the dead languages Biblical Hebrew, the Samaritan Pentateuch (third century, a. d.), the Carthaginian, Phœnician Inscriptions, and the living language of the Jews.
The Aramaic or Northern Class consists of the dead languages Chaldee (Masora, Talmud, Targum, Biblical Chaldee), Syriac (Peshito, second cent. a. d.), Cuneiform Inscriptions of Babylon and Nineveh, and the living language Neo-Syriac.