The English meaning of the Latin term 'Romanis' is the following: of or pertaining to the Romans. The term is in the ablative or dative case. The nominative, or subject, form in the masculine singular is Romanus.
The Roman invasions of the mountainous and heavily fortified country of Dacia were particularly strongly resisted by the local population, resulting in huge numbers of Roman casualties and lengthy and expensive military campaigns. As a result the Dacians were almost all enslaved, deported or drafted into the Roman Army, leaving Dacia practically empty. It then became a retirement location for former Roman soldiers who were given farms, land, servants and animals; the country's language became Latin and the new population was almost entirely "Roman" in the widest sense.
Dacia was eventually renamed Romania, "the country of the Romans" because of this change in its population.
Romanus (n, 2nd declension), romanus (adj, 2nd declension)
rty
Rome
Latin.
Latin was the language of the Romans. The Romans were Latins
The Romans used the Latin language. The educated Romans also used Greek, although Latin was the common Roman language.The Romans used the Latin language. The educated Romans also used Greek, although Latin was the common Roman language.The Romans used the Latin language. The educated Romans also used Greek, although Latin was the common Roman language.The Romans used the Latin language. The educated Romans also used Greek, although Latin was the common Roman language.The Romans used the Latin language. The educated Romans also used Greek, although Latin was the common Roman language.The Romans used the Latin language. The educated Romans also used Greek, although Latin was the common Roman language.The Romans used the Latin language. The educated Romans also used Greek, although Latin was the common Roman language.The Romans used the Latin language. The educated Romans also used Greek, although Latin was the common Roman language.The Romans used the Latin language. The educated Romans also used Greek, although Latin was the common Roman language.
They were the Greeks, the Romans,and the Latin
No, the Romans did not speak French. The Romans spoke Latin, which was the official language of the Roman Empire. French is a Romance language that developed from Latin over time.
The Romans spoke the Latin language. The upper classes or the educated also spoke Greek.The Romans spoke the Latin language. The upper classes or the educated also spoke Greek.The Romans spoke the Latin language. The upper classes or the educated also spoke Greek.The Romans spoke the Latin language. The upper classes or the educated also spoke Greek.The Romans spoke the Latin language. The upper classes or the educated also spoke Greek.The Romans spoke the Latin language. The upper classes or the educated also spoke Greek.The Romans spoke the Latin language. The upper classes or the educated also spoke Greek.The Romans spoke the Latin language. The upper classes or the educated also spoke Greek.The Romans spoke the Latin language. The upper classes or the educated also spoke Greek.
Latin
Latin is the language of the Romans, and the Romans most often associated Aphrodite with their Venus.
Roman works of literature are written in Latin because it was the official language of the Roman republic (later the Roman Empire). However, there probably was a difference between the formal Latin used in literature and the language spoke by the Romans.
The Latin's aren't, and never were, a people. The Romans named their language Latin. So if you're looking for what the Latin's did, you should probably be looking under what the Romans did. ;)
The Latin's aren't, and never were, a people. The Romans named their language Latin. So if you're looking for what the Latin's did, you should probably be looking under what the Romans did. ;)
Latin became the universal language.