Roman culture and language was inferior to that of the Greeks.
They used the Greek culture.
Romans borrowed greek's ideas. And they borrowed the column idea.
Greek
John Locke
Rome was Roman. The Greeks were Greeks.
Rome did not borrow any ideas for its polytheistic religion. It was polytheistic right from the start. All ancient religions, apart from Judaism, were polytheistic. Rome adopted five Greek divinities and later linked its deities to the Greek ones. She also adopted some Etruscan and Italic deities. However, this was not a borrowing of ideas for their religion. It was the incorporation of foreign divinities and cults in the pantheon of Roman deities and the array of cults.
They used the Greek culture.
Romans borrowed greek's ideas. And they borrowed the column idea.
No. The Greek Empire and the Roman empire had very different cultures. Although the Romans did adopt and borrow certain elements of Greek culture, their cultures were not the same.
No, they borrowed from the Greeks and in Ancient Rome there were no "epic heros or stories " , but the Gods were considered real and to be worshipped. In modern times did they become "epic".
One consequence of ideas exchanged between ancient Greece and Rome is that the Romans would copy Greek's art and architecture
All cultures (or civilizations) borrow from other cultures. This can be done by various means such as, war, trade, intellectual contact. At the time of the Roman expansion, the Greek culture was predominant in the area. Sicily was Greek and southern Italy itself was heavily populated with Greek cities. It was inevitable that Greek ideas would merge with the Roman practicability.
romans
Alot of them.
The Japanese borrowed ideas such as writing system, architecture, Buddhism, Confucianism, and government structure from China. The adoption of these elements greatly influenced the development of Japanese culture and society.
The Greek Empire was before the Roman Empire and many people say that the Greeks are really advanced in things like math.
Yes. Except Thais don't borrow; they steal!