The Roman language was Latin. Of course the everyday language of Rome was based on the language of the Romans. Latin heavily influenced the Languages if Italy, Gaul (France), Hispania (Spain) Lusitania (Portugal) and Dacia (Romania). So much so that the modern languages of these countries are derived from Latin. Latin probably influenced the languages of other areas of the Roman Empire, but these were replaced by languages of the the conquests and large scale immigrations of Germanic peoples, Slavs and Arabs into areas of the Roman Empire. Latin was also the language of administration throughout the empire.
Latin influenced the everyday life of Greece only in so far as it was the language of administration. It did not influence the Greek language. The Romans elites received an education in both Latin and Greek and were fluent in Greek.
they didnt lolololol
The Roman language didn't influence many other languages, including Chinese, Japanese, Inuit, Aborigine, Sami and many more.
YES! Most of what we do today were influenced through Rome and Greece.
Yes and no. Gladiatorial combat was not a Greek entertainment, it was strictly a Roman occurance. However, once Rome conquered Greece and Roman influence filtered into the East, gladiatorial contests became popular there.
Roman culture and language was inferior to that of the Greeks.
The Romans did not influence English and Greek. They influenced Spanish, French and modern Italian. The Greek language was around before the Roman language, and English is a Germanic language not Roman. The most popular languages at the time where Roman, Greek, and German. Roman- Spanish, Modern Italian, French German-English, Swedish, Dutch, Norwegian, Finish, Polish, Czech, Greek- Roman, Spanish, Armenian, Albanian, ect.
Artists from ancient Greece were the biggest influence for the Roman artists.
The Roman language didn't influence many other languages, including Chinese, Japanese, Inuit, Aborigine, Sami and many more.
Roman Empire, except Greece,
YES! Most of what we do today were influenced through Rome and Greece.
The three ancient civilisations that most profoundly influenced modern Western culture would probably be Rome, which gave us its empire; Greece, which gave us its philosophy and ideals; and Judea, which gave us Christianity.
Technically there is no such thing as a Greco-Roman language. The term Greco-Roman refers to the combined cultures of ancient Greece and ancient Rome. The languages spoken were Latin and Greek. The languages were separate with a few crosswords words in both.Technically there is no such thing as a Greco-Roman language. The term Greco-Roman refers to the combined cultures of ancient Greece and ancient Rome. The languages spoken were Latin and Greek. The languages were separate with a few crosswords words in both.Technically there is no such thing as a Greco-Roman language. The term Greco-Roman refers to the combined cultures of ancient Greece and ancient Rome. The languages spoken were Latin and Greek. The languages were separate with a few crosswords words in both.Technically there is no such thing as a Greco-Roman language. The term Greco-Roman refers to the combined cultures of ancient Greece and ancient Rome. The languages spoken were Latin and Greek. The languages were separate with a few crosswords words in both.Technically there is no such thing as a Greco-Roman language. The term Greco-Roman refers to the combined cultures of ancient Greece and ancient Rome. The languages spoken were Latin and Greek. The languages were separate with a few crosswords words in both.Technically there is no such thing as a Greco-Roman language. The term Greco-Roman refers to the combined cultures of ancient Greece and ancient Rome. The languages spoken were Latin and Greek. The languages were separate with a few crosswords words in both.Technically there is no such thing as a Greco-Roman language. The term Greco-Roman refers to the combined cultures of ancient Greece and ancient Rome. The languages spoken were Latin and Greek. The languages were separate with a few crosswords words in both.Technically there is no such thing as a Greco-Roman language. The term Greco-Roman refers to the combined cultures of ancient Greece and ancient Rome. The languages spoken were Latin and Greek. The languages were separate with a few crosswords words in both.Technically there is no such thing as a Greco-Roman language. The term Greco-Roman refers to the combined cultures of ancient Greece and ancient Rome. The languages spoken were Latin and Greek. The languages were separate with a few crosswords words in both.
The Romans spoke and wrote Latin. Their contemporaries in Greece spoke and wrote Ancient Greek. :D
Yes and no. Gladiatorial combat was not a Greek entertainment, it was strictly a Roman occurance. However, once Rome conquered Greece and Roman influence filtered into the East, gladiatorial contests became popular there.
No. The ancient Greek did not use the English language. Because there was no English language in that time. English language derived from Latin which was the official language of Roman Empire and the Roman Empire is the successor of ancient Greek the golden age of Greece.
they lived in Southern Italy and were influenced by the roman culture
Roman culture and language was inferior to that of the Greeks.
Yes, most certainly. Latin was the lingua franca of Roman Europe for the duration of the Roman Empire (this only for those countries under Roman rule at any given time), but for Roman people, Latin was just their everyday language.