No Jesus spoke aramaic.
Primarily Aramaic, but some Hebrew and Greek, too.
Because there are many people in England that speak Greek and Latin.
Spartans were Greek, so they spoke Greek.
No, the ancient Greeks did not speak Latin. Latin was the language of the Romans, while the ancient Greeks spoke Greek.
It comes from the Latin words for "alone" and "speak." (It is not Greek)
The word Jesus is the Latin form of the Greek Iesous, which in turn is the transliteration of the Hebrew Jeshua, or Joshua, or again Jehoshua, meaning "Jehovah is salvation."
He spoke Aramaic, but also Hebrew and Greek.
Greek is spoken only in Greece. Latin is not spoken anywhere, is the official language of the Vatican along with Italian but they speak Italian.
The Romans spoke Italian, Greek and Latin as it spread its empire.
No, the Greeks spoke, and still speak, Greek, though many of them probably knew Latin in ancient times. Since Greece was the country of so many philosophers and artists, it was important for educated Romans to speak Greek (and not the other way around).
For starters it's spelled Latin not Latan. And Greek came first as Greece is the region which would eventually become Rome and then speak Latin.
The Romans conducted everything in their language; it was what they spoke. They used Greek only when a diplomat or ambassador could not speak Latin, or when they were trying to put on airs.The Romans conducted everything in their language; it was what they spoke. They used Greek only when a diplomat or ambassador could not speak Latin, or when they were trying to put on airs.The Romans conducted everything in their language; it was what they spoke. They used Greek only when a diplomat or ambassador could not speak Latin, or when they were trying to put on airs.The Romans conducted everything in their language; it was what they spoke. They used Greek only when a diplomat or ambassador could not speak Latin, or when they were trying to put on airs.The Romans conducted everything in their language; it was what they spoke. They used Greek only when a diplomat or ambassador could not speak Latin, or when they were trying to put on airs.The Romans conducted everything in their language; it was what they spoke. They used Greek only when a diplomat or ambassador could not speak Latin, or when they were trying to put on airs.The Romans conducted everything in their language; it was what they spoke. They used Greek only when a diplomat or ambassador could not speak Latin, or when they were trying to put on airs.The Romans conducted everything in their language; it was what they spoke. They used Greek only when a diplomat or ambassador could not speak Latin, or when they were trying to put on airs.The Romans conducted everything in their language; it was what they spoke. They used Greek only when a diplomat or ambassador could not speak Latin, or when they were trying to put on airs.