Nowhere. Its a dead language. There are some countries like Portugal, Spain, Andorra, Italy, San Marino, Monaco, France, Belgium, Switzerland, and Romania that used to speak it a long time ago.
Well usually u can find them in Rome but the place that Latin is spoken now is The Vatican
in Vatican city, Latin is used for official documents. Latin is no longer spoken anywhere else except a few words in legal documents.
the Vatican. besides that it is only learnt in schools in western countries, but that is slowly declining
Latin is not spoken in any country, but it is used by the Catholic Church extensively.
religion, philosphy, invention
"Esponelises," no lie! i speak latin!
Mute,dumb or aphasic.
res ipsa loquitur
Loqui - means 'to speak, talk, say.'
Diaboli dicere et apperebit.
I speak and study Latin. So people do speak and study Latin.
cur dice latina EDIT: That is not a grammatical translation at all :) Without more input, there are a few ways to take the questions you asked: Why should (I) speak Latin Why should (we) speak Latin Why should (you) speak Latin Why should (y'all) speak Latin Why should (he/she/it) speak Latin Why should (they) speak Latin In English and Latin you can leave out a nominative, but in Latin any regular verb needs to have a person. In any of these situations, you would still begin: Cur dicam/dicas/dicat/dicamus/dicatis/dicant "Why should [subj] speak", using the subjunctive to convey the "should" aspect. The second part is tricky as well. Do you mean "[speak] in Latin", or a more general "[speak] the Latin language"? for the first: Cur dicamus Latine? and for the second: Cur dicamus linguam Latinam? (NB I decided to use only why should we speak, as it seems to fit most contexts you might be asking this for)
"Loquor" is a Latin verb meaning "to speak" or "to talk." It comes from the Latin word "loqui," which also means "to speak" or "to talk."
There is no such thing as a "person from latin". Latin is a language, not a place.If you are talking about a person from Latin America, most speak either Portuguese or Spanish. Some speak French.
It is a verb, meaning to "help" or "aid" (third-person singular present).
The pope can speak Latin, but his native language is German. He only really uses Latin in very formal written works and in Latin Masses.
Dicere is the Latin root word that means 'to speak'. The word in Latin is an infinitive. The first person singular form in the present indicative is 'dico', which means '[I] am speaking, do speak, speak'. That form finds an older version in 'deico', which is related to the Greek 'deiknymi'.
"Esponelises," no lie! i speak latin!
he can speak latin
England people don't speak in latin. In old days other contries use to but now none of people speak in Latin. England people only speak in English or American or more but mostlly English and American.
The Romans spoke Latin.
Yes, he was a student of Latin.