No, people in Rome speak Italian as their main language. Latin is no longer in common use in daily conversation.
Rome is a city, not a country--it happens to be the capital of Italy, and the language spoken there is therefore Italian. If the original question referred to the empire/kingdom of Rome, then the most widely spoken language was Latin.
She probably spoke Latin as she was from Rome.
Roughly 420 million people in Latin America speak Spanish as their primary language.
The people in Rome spoke Latin, which evolved into Vulgar Latin during the late Roman Empire. This form of Latin eventually developed into the Romance languages, such as Italian, French, Spanish, and Portuguese.
While Italian is the official language in Rome, many people also speak English and some may speak Spanish, particularly in tourist areas due to the similarities between the two languages. However, the main language spoken by locals in Rome is Italian.
Italian is spoken in Rome today. In ancient Rome Latin was the language.
She probably spoke Latin as she was from Rome.
Less than 1% of people speak Latin fluently today. It is primarily used in academic and religious settings rather than everyday communication.
People in Rome speak Italian.
In modern day Rome, the majority of people speak Italian. Therefore, the answer you are looking for is "Sì". If you mean ancient Rome, they spoke Latin, to which they said 'Ita' or 'Vere'.
I speak and study Latin. So people do speak and study Latin.
England people don't speak in latin. In old days other contries use to but now none of people speak in Latin. England people only speak in English or American or more but mostlly English and American.
Yes, the roman numerals originated with the Estruscans and were adapted by the romans.Yes they are because in Rome, they speak latin
romanian
Rome is a city, not a country--it happens to be the capital of Italy, and the language spoken there is therefore Italian. If the original question referred to the empire/kingdom of Rome, then the most widely spoken language was Latin.
I don't believe there is a language called "Roman". In Italian, which they speak currently in Rome, it is la sorella. For sisters, it's le sorelle. In Latin, which they used to speak in Rome, I think it is soror
The Latin people were important in the times of ancient Rome because the Romans were (and still are) Latins.