You are probably talking about Latin.
The current language spoken in Rome, Italy is Italian.
Italian is spoken in Rome today. In ancient Rome Latin was the language.
The closest language to Albanian is considered to be the Illyrian language, which is an extinct language that was spoken in the western Balkans.
latin is no longer spoken as a national language. It was the language of ancient Rome
No. Lummi went extinct in the year 2000.
Rome is a city, not a country--it happens to be the capital of Italy, and the language spoken there is therefore Italian. If the original question referred to the empire/kingdom of Rome, then the most widely spoken language was Latin.
Latin was the language spoken by the ancient Romans and it is still used today in the Vatican City in Rome.
The people of Hittites spoke the language of Nesite. It is an extinct language spoken by the people of Hittites who created an empire in modern day Turkey.
Latin is the classic language spoken in ancient Rome and has been used as a language of scholarship for many centuries. It is the root language of many modern Romance languages, such as Italian, Spanish, French, and Portuguese.
This verse predicts that there shall be five cities in Egypt that speak the Canaanite language. But that language was never spoken in Egypt, and it is extinct now.
The language spoken in Kush was Meroitic, which is an extinct language that was used in the Kingdom of Kush in ancient Nubia. It is believed to be a Nilo-Saharan language, but its exact classification remains uncertain due to the limited knowledge available.
Latin is the extinct language that is the mother of the Italian language. Italian developed from Vulgar Latin which was spoken in the region that is now Italy. Over time, Latin evolved into the distinctive language known today as Italian.