As one of the two lingua francas - Latin and Greek.
As one of the two lingua francas - Latin and Greek.
Briefly, vulgar (common) Latin was used throughout the Roman Empire.
Because the soldiers manning the out posts of the Roman Empire spoke/wrote in Latin as it was the official language of the Roman Empire... ergo if you wanted any association with the Roman Empire you had to know basic latin. Latin really caught on as being the one, uniform language of the whole Roman Empire
Europeans began using the Latin language during the Roman Empire, which lasted from around 27 BC to 476 AD. Latin was the official language of the empire and became widely used across Europe in areas under Roman control. After the fall of the Roman Empire, Latin continued to be used as the language of scholarship, religion, and administration in medieval Europe.
The Roman numeral system is used in the Latin language which is still spoken today in the Vatican
The official language in the western Roman Empire was Latin. Latin was also the official language of the eastern part of the Roman Empire, together with Greek. This was because it was the language of the Romans.
no. Latin is the lenguage that was used in the roman empire. Spanish as well as italian, french, etc. are lenguages that comes from Latin
mostly Latin
No, latin was the language they spoke during the roman empire.
Latin.
Latin was the primary language of the Roman Empire and is still the language of the Roman Catholic Church. The Roman Empire was a major force in the world for several thousands of years, beginning with Romulus and Remus (according to myths) and stretching for a thousand years beyond the birth of Christ. Through Vatican II Latin was also the language used at all Catholic masses.
Latin was the primary language in the Roman Empire, as it became widespread with the expansion of Rome's rule, the stationing of Roman troops and the increase of Roman settlements around the empire. Some areas of the empire saw the development of forms of Vulgar Latin, a mixture of Latin and the languages of the local natives - some of these have survived. Greek was an important language in the eastern part of the empire because the local elites were Greek-speaking. Many writings, particularly those of intellectuals the early Christians in this area were in Greek. Official documents in this area were either in Latin or Greek. The Roman elite's education was both in Latin and Greek and they spoke Greek fluently and often used this language.