At the surface, it would seem to hint to the power of the Roman Empire, but obviously there is a deeper meaning.
The quote reflects that there are more than one possible paths for achieving the same goal, different routes to the same destination.
One might take one road or the other, but both lead to Rome.
people in rome who were nobles and owned estates
artistic values of ancient Greece and Rome
Buys
To compare and contrast Greece and Rome, you need to do some research on them to find ways they were the same and different. Jot down some notes of key points. When you have the information, you are ready to compare and contrast them.
Humanists praised the achievements of classical civilizations such as Greece and Rome, while individualists praised the achievements of particular people. :: APEX
All roads lead to Rome!!!
If all roads lead to Rome, all roads lead away from Rome -- take one.
All roads lead to ROME.
all roads lead to rome
all roads are said to lead to rome
The roads led form Rome to the other parts of Italy. What you probably have in mind is the famous expression that works the other way round: 'all roads lead to Rome.'
The phrase "all roads lead to Rome" has a medieval origin. It first appeared as Mille viae ducunt homines per saecula Romam (A thousand roads lead men forever to Rome) in a book by Alain de Lille in 1175. Chaucer wrote: "Right as diverse pathes leden the folk the righte wey to Rome. It originally made reference to Roman roads generally and the Golden Milestone, specifically. This was a monument in the forum of Rome from which all roads were considered to start and from which the distances in the Roman Empire were measured. The meaning of the phrase is: different paths can take one to the same goal.
all roads lead to rome
Well, because all roads lead to Rome;)
When you have multiple alternatives and the result for each alternative is the same--all roads lead to rome.
Rome was not built in a day. When in Rome, do as Romans do. All roads lead to Rome.
all roads lead to Rome