The Romans in the 5th century BCE adapted Etruscan who adapted italic script from the western Greeks.
Yes, the Romans did have a written language one which grew very sophisticated The language was Latin (the Romans were Latins).
Latin
ancient Rome
Italian is spoken in Rome today. In ancient Rome Latin was the language.
ancient rome had priests for its polytheistic religions. christian priests were more common when constatine the great made Christianity the official language of rome.
"Well, if Italians speak Italian and Greeks speak Greek, then ancient Romans spoke Roman!" Uhhm...not quite. I have no idea what the ancient Romans called their language, but we now call it Latin, not Roman.
The Romans called their language "lingua Latina".
Ancient Rome's official language was Latin. Today, Rome is a city in italy, which has Italian as its official language.
ancient Rome
Italian is spoken in Rome today. In ancient Rome Latin was the language.
it is a language traditions
The ancient Latin of Rome.
latin is no longer spoken as a national language. It was the language of ancient Rome
there were only twelve tables in ancient rome and they were Rome's written laws and were placed in the forum
Most people in ancient Rome spoke Latin, but some cities that ancient Rome took over spoke their native language. A lot of people in ancient Rome spoke Greece.
The language used by the ancient Romans, which spread throughout their Republic, and later their Empire, was Latin.
Latin
ancient rome had priests for its polytheistic religions. christian priests were more common when constatine the great made Christianity the official language of rome.
I Am not sure I understand your question. The ruins of Ancient Rome are in Rome and the language spoken in Italy is Italian. If you want to learn it there are many ways to do so. If you go to Pompei you can see ancient graffiti from 79AD, but there is no longer ancient Latin spoken as it was 2000 years ago.