inventio linguas inventio mundum
it is called pavo in latin
Yes, Latin is considered a Romance language because it is the precursor to the modern Romance languages such as French, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, and Romanian. These languages evolved from spoken Latin over the centuries.
mundus
De hoc mundo: Out of This world
Insanis
Latin and Greek meet the international classical languages as they have epics and meet the other requirements. However, I say Tamil is the best because it is one of the very few ancient languages that has survived and still spoken by millions of common people today. Latin/Greek and Sanskrit are dead languages and are not spoken by commoners today.
Tene mundum.
you will discover a world full of death
Romance languages are languages that are descended from Latin, the language of the Romans. You can see the etymological similarity between the words "Roman" and "romance.'' The grammar and vocabulary of all romance languages comes from Latin. This is because after the Roman Empire collapsed, Latin-speaking people from different regions of Europe fell out of touch with one another. The Latin that was spoken in northern France began to develop different pronunciation from, say, the Latin spoken in southern Italy. Eventually, differences in pronunciation and syntax became so different that "Latin" speaking peoples were in reality no longer speaking Latin, but new languages. The most spoken romance languages are (not in order) Spanish, French, Italian, Portuguese, Romanian, and Catalan. There are dozens of others with smaller numbers of speakers like Galician, Occitan, Piedmontese, Romansch, and Sicilian. The speakers of these less significant languages are almost always bilingual with the official language(s) of their respective countries.
Spanish: veintidós French: vingt-deux German: zweiundzwanzig Italian: ventidue
Rex mei mundi.
ego princeps mundi