I don't know the answer just look in your text book and find the answer
Rome is not on the coast of the Aegean Sea.
Rome lies on the coast of the Tyrrhenian Sea.
Yes, the northern coast of Egypt faces the Mediterranean Sea.
Rome is in central Italy, in the modern region of Lazio, between the Apennine Mountains and the coast of the Tyrrhenian Sea.
Examples: Paris, Madrid, Rome, Cairo.
The northern coast of Britain faces north and obviously the western coast faces west, the eastern coast faces east and the southern coast faces south.
No they did not. Rome was (and still is) in Italy, on the opposite (European) coast of the Mediterranean Sea. The Egyptians never ventured into Europe.
Rome's location in the Mediterranean area (though it was not actually on the coast of this sea) meant that Rome's first imperial expansion occurred around the Mediterranean Sea. She took over all the areas around its shores.
Rome is inland, so no sea actually borders it. It is nearer to the west coast of Italy. To the west is the Tyrrhenian Sea. The Mediterranean is farther west, connected to the Tyrrhenian. To the east of Italy is the Adriatic Sea.
The West Coast of Australia faces the Pacific Ocean. No, it's the East Coast. Look at a map. The West Coast faces the Indian Ocean.
Italy is a peninsula in the centre the Mediterranean Sea, between the western and eastern basins of this sea. Rome lies of the cost Thyrrenian Sea (the western coast), in central Italy.
No. Rome was on the seven Hills of Rome which were in a hilly area between the Apennines (a mountain chain which runs through the Italian peninsula) and the coast.