The didn't change it to 'Roma', they changed it to Italian.
There is more than one answer but latin was getting old in all the other evolving languages. (that were based off latin)
Latin Romans originally had their own language (Roma Romanae). So did the Etruscan, Sabine, Iberian people who used forms of Latin. As Rome expanded the Latin people became citizens and little by little Latin became the ruling language, however it was mixed with the Greek and Roman, which has turned into modern Italian of today. This change took several hundred years. However even to this day it is referred to as the Roman language, which constitutes a higher ranking in the minds of people than Italian.
Rome is the proper name for the city of Rome. It would be "Roma" in both Latin and Italian.Rome is the proper name for the city of Rome. It would be "Roma" in both Latin and Italian.Rome is the proper name for the city of Rome. It would be "Roma" in both Latin and Italian.Rome is the proper name for the city of Rome. It would be "Roma" in both Latin and Italian.Rome is the proper name for the city of Rome. It would be "Roma" in both Latin and Italian.Rome is the proper name for the city of Rome. It would be "Roma" in both Latin and Italian.Rome is the proper name for the city of Rome. It would be "Roma" in both Latin and Italian.Rome is the proper name for the city of Rome. It would be "Roma" in both Latin and Italian.Rome is the proper name for the city of Rome. It would be "Roma" in both Latin and Italian.
The latin word for Rome is Roma
Roma.
In Romani, which is the language of the Roma people, you would say "Sarakiri."
Yes. Roma is both the Latin and Italian name for the city of Rome.
In Latin-Roma.
The Roma and Romani are essentially the same group of people. "Roma" is the plural form of "Rom" and is commonly used to refer to the ethnic group as a whole, while "Romani" is an adjective used to describe anything related to the Roma people. So, the Roma are the people, and Romani is the adjective used to describe their culture, language, etc.
Romanians are the descendants of the Dacians, a tribe that lived in the area when the Romans took it as the province of Dacia. Ethnic Roma (Gypsies) are descendants of Indo-Aryans that migrated west from the Indian subcontinent into Europe and the Middle East. Currently, it is estimated that anywhere from 500,000 to 2,000,000 Roma live in Romania. From the total population of Romania up to 2% is made of the Roma ethnic group.The Roma face intense discrimination throughout Europe.The Roma are a widely dispersed ethnic group that lives across the world not only near their historic heartland in Southern and Eastern Europe, but also in the American continent and the Middle East.
Romanians speak a language of Romanic origin; the people is from Daco-Getic (Thracian peoples) origin with strong influences from Romans, Slaves, Turkish peoples.
Short answers: at the height of the empire, the city Rome had over 1 million inhabitants, the vast majority of which spoke Latin. Longer answer: throughout antiquity Latin was the main spoken language of the whole Italian peninsula, which means several million people spoke it as their native language. It was also the official written language of the whole Roman empire, which means many more used it as their second language. A little background: what we call today Latin is not the original Latin, but rather the Latin they spoke in Rome... "Roman Latin" probably would be a more correct term. Even before Rome was founded (700 BC circa) Latin was the spoken language of the Latins, which were one of the so-called Italic people... other tribes included Ombran, Falisci, Sabelli... they all spoke very similar languages anyway. Back then Roma was just one of the many small towns belonging to the Latin people. When Rome started becoming dominant (very roughly, around 400-300 BC) a lot of other Italic-language people started settling there, along with people who had very different languages, such as the Etruscans. This melting pot resulted in what we called today Latin, or better Roman Latin.
France Treats 's roma people badly roma people who live in France\Europe that are under educated unemployed are persecuted daily There was also over 10,000 roma people killed in France in 2010