Italian, Spanish, French are all examples of latin-based languages.
No, latin came from italic, greek came from hellenic.
Italian came from the language called LATIN in these days. Latin was spoken in what is now Italy, and other places in the times of the Roman Empire.
The Latin language came from Latium, a region in central Italy where the Latini lived. The Latini founded Rome and gave their name to the Latin language, which was later spread throughout Europe by the Roman Empire.
Latin is the language from which both French and Spanish evolved. French and Spanish, along with other Romance languages, developed from Latin during the Roman Empire. It is difficult to say definitively which language came first between French and Spanish, as they both evolved alongside each other from Latin.
The word ton came from a language called Latin
Greek
the word lingua came from Latin.
Latin
igneous rock came from the latin language meaning fire
Mainly Latin, but also home language (where they came from)
The English language is a romantic language. Other romantic languages include Italian and Spanish. All three of these languages came from Latin, which is why they are called "romantic" languages.
Spanish, like Italian, French, etc., is a romance language. That means that it evolved from the language of the Romans, Latin.