Cicero. His full name was Marcus Tullius Cicero, but we just refer to him as Cicero.
Ovid
Cato
Quintillian refer : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quintilian
roman.
Roman Anglo-Saxon Jutes-Danes Norman
Albion No, Albion is the Gallic name for the island now called Great Britain. The answer is Brtannia. This was the name given to the Roman Province on the island of Great Britain, which encompassed England and much of Wales, as well as their name for the island as a whole. Scotland was the only region of the island the Roman's didn't control, and they gave it the name Caledonia.
Cato
Quintillian refer : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quintilian
roman.
He is a great orator, and they wanted to prep him for the upcoming election. It was important for him to get his name in the spotlight.
It is Britannia.
Orator
It has three letters.
The town of Tully is located in New York. The name of the town is taken from the name Marcus Tulius Cicero, who was a Roman orator. The town of Tully is in Onandaga County, and is on the southern border of the county.
Someone who is skilled at public speaking is often referred to as an orator or a rhetorician.
I've heard it is roman but there is an original name for them. I just can't remember what it is!
It was a custom of the time to adopt a pen name. (As was the custom of the time, they adopted pen names: Abigail was Diana, after the Roman goddess of the moon and later she adopted the pen name, Portia, wife of the great Roman politician Brutus. John adopted the name, Lysander, after the Spartan war hero. John often addressed his letters to his "Dear Adoreable" or "My dear Diana," or "My Dear Portia," but Abigail addressed her letters to John, as she would for the rest of her life, to "My Dearest Friend.")
Cicero, Hitler, Kennedy