Because there are many people in England that speak Greek and Latin.
No. They usually learn Latin.
Robert Hooke never got a bachelor's degree while attending Oxford. What Hooke took away from Oxford was knowledge in astronomy, mathematics, mechanics, music, geometry, and Greek and Latin.
maybe because it meant a certain world in latin or greek or something like that
It's a Latin based language, but in the scientific vocabulary, most of the words are Greek or of Greek origin.
Nope, he's English.
The scientific names of things are usually in Latin and Greek. Answer: it is because the Greeks were one of the first civilizations to study human anatomy and record it. Therefore, since they discovered it, they can name it. and unfortunatly, we have to learn some greek and latin to learn A&P
Yes, the educated Romans were fluent in Greek. They spoke, read and wrote in it along with Latin. Most upper class Romans were educated in Greece. -- The language of Rome and the Roman Empire was Latin. Greek was a language for the elite; they had to learn it in school or with a tutor. Much like Latin or French for Americans.
He learned small Latin and less Greek according to Ben Jonson.
Greek and Latin. But in general he spoke Dutch, English and French.
Flex a greek or latin
It is derived from the Latin cognoscere, which is from cum "with, together" and gnoscere, "to come to know, to learn about". Gnoscere (which appears as noscerein Classical Latin, having lost its initial g-) is from the Proto-Indo-European root *gno-, which is the source of English "know" and Greek gnosis.
re is greek and latin