Legal English borrows heavily from Latin language and phrases. The Romans had established a legal system that was transcribed in Latin.
Yes. This is true.
true
Yes it does because most English comes from greek terminology.
law
Greek and Latin are the primary source languages for medical terminology.
Anatomical terminology is terminology which describes parts of the body. The majority of Anatomical terminology is overwhelmingly derived from Latin, followed by Greek.
Perhaps you mean "how," since you cannot mean "why." There are many Greek words in English, but English really "comes" from the Germanic branch of the Indo-European family of languages, with a major admixture of Norman French vocabulary and grammar. Greek presence in English is mostly found in artistic and scientific terminology. Many Greek words were borrowed by Latin, which had no artistic or scientific vocabulary of its own. Latin developed into French, which brought many Greek words to English. Of course many Greek words are directly borrowed into English, especially by members of learnèd professions.
Words enter the English language through various ways such as borrowing from other languages, creating new words through blending or compounding, evolving from existing words, or adopting slang and colloquial expressions. New words can also be introduced through technological advancements, cultural influences, and societal changes.
In short, No. Roman culture was heavily inspired by Greek culture and Emperors such as Hadrian tried heavily to integrate Greek culture into Roman culture.
Anatomical language is derived from both Greek and Latin terminology. The original medical texts were in Greek, and then translated into Latin. They were used until the 1700's until they were translated into other languages, like English.
Mimema='something initiated' ----Greek.
Lamont is a greek word it is offent spell like La Mont meaing the king in greek terminology
Greek culture.