- 
  
  Developed by Konrad Zuse
 Designed for engineering purposes
 Plankalkul is German for "Plan Calculus"
 Source
- 
  
  Developed by John Backus
 Designed for numeric computation and scientific computing
 Fortran is derived from "Formula Translation"
 Source
- 
  
  Developed by Charles Katz
 Designed to complete mathematical computations
 MATH-MATIC is a marketing name for the AT-3 (Algebraic Translator 3)
 Source
- 
  
  Developed by John McCarthy
 Designed for Mathematical notation, also used in AI research
 The name LISP is derived from "LISt Processor"
 Source
- 
  
  Developed by Grace Hopper
 Designed for business use
 COBOL stands for Common Buisness-Oriented Language
 Source
- 
  
  
- 
  
  Developed by John Kemeny and Thomas Kurtz
 Originally designed to allow non-science and non-math students to use computers
 BASIC stands for Beginner's All-purpose Symbolic Instruction Code
 Source
- 
  
  Developed by Wally Feurzeig and Seymour Papert
 Designed for educational programming purposes, specifically predictions and reasoning
 Logo is derived from logos or "thought"
 Source
- 
  
  Developed by Ken Thompson and Dennis Ritchie
 Designed for machine-independent applications
 B is named after Bon, an earlier programming language written by Thompson
 Source
- 
  
  Developed by Niklaus Wirth
 Designed of encourage proper programming practices
 Pascal is named after French mathematician/philosopher Blaise Pascal
 Source
- 
  
  Developed by Dennis Ritchie
 Designed to re-implement the Unix OS. also used as a replacement for assembly language and in various application software
 C was named after B, due to C being the next letter in the alphabet
 Source
- 
  
  Development team led by Robin Milner
 Designed to provide proof tactics for the LCF theorem prover
 ML is short for MetaLanguage
 Source
- 
  
  Developed by Donald Chamberlin and Raymond Boyce
 Designed to manage data in a relational database management system
 SQL stands for Structured Query Language
 Source
- 
  
  Development team led by Jean Ichbiah
 Designed for DoD programming use
 Named after the first computer programmer, Ada Lovelace
 Source
- 
  
  Developed by Bjarne Stroustrup
 Designed for system programming and embedded, though it is useful in many other areas
 Named after C, its primary parent language.
 Source
- 
  
  Developed by Microsoft
 Designed to be easy to learn and use, can create numerous applications
 Visual basic gets its name from basic, its predecessor
 Source
- 
  
  Developed by Guido van Rossum
 Designed for code readability and concise coding
 Python gets his name from the T.V. series Monty Python's Flying Circus
 Source
- 
  
  Developed by Anders Hejlsberg
 Designed for rapid application development for Windows (replaced Turbo Pascal)
 The name Delphi originates from one of the many code-names used at Borland Software Corporation, where Hejlsberg worked
 Source
- 
  
  
- 
  
  Developed by James Gosling
 Designed for application development with as few implementation dependencies as possible (originally for T.V.)
 The name Java originates from Java coffee
 Source
- 
  
  Developed by Brendan Elch
 Designed for use in the World-Wide Web alongside HTML and CSS
 Named similar to Java as a marketing ploy
 Source