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No. The ancient Greek did not use the English language. Because there was no English language in that time. English language derived from Latin which was the official language of Roman Empire and the Roman Empire is the successor of ancient Greek the golden age of Greece.
The English word monarch was derived in the mid 15th century from the L. Latin word monarcha, which derived from the Greek word monarkhes.
No, Latin is not derived from Greek. Both languages are part of the Indo-European language family, but they developed independently from each other.
It's because the English language is in part derived from the Latin language and Latin was the language spoken by the Romans.
Probability is derived from Latin, not Greek.Probability is derived from Latin, not Greek.Probability is derived from Latin, not Greek.Probability is derived from Latin, not Greek.
As with English, there are many source languages, but mainly German is derived from Latin, Ancient Greek and Ancient Germanic.
Yes, it's possible that Latin has a larger vocabulary than Greek. One reason is the borrowing of many words from the classical language of the ancient Greeks. But just for the record, the borrowing isn't one way. For example, the modern Greek names for the months of the year come from classical Latin.
Latin, Greek and Hebrew.
English developed from the Germanic Anglo-Saxon language. However, over the centuries it has absorbed, word,s phrases and some grammar from French, Latin, Greek, Spanish, Celtic and Norse languages. The word 'Grammar' , means 'Greek teaching/learning' , because the Classical Greeks, where the first civilisation to structure language into nouns, verbs, sentences etc.,
We use the Latin alphabet, which was derived from the Greek alphabet, which was derived from the Phoenician alphabet that derived from cuneiform which derived from pictographs (hieroglyphs)Latin alphabet for English: ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZLatin alphabet for Latin: ABCDEFZHIKLMNOPQRSTVWXGreek alphabet: ΑΒΓΔΕΖΗΘΙΚΛΜΝΞΟΠΡΣΤΥΦΧΨΩ
Latin words make up about 50% (including Norman French words), and Greek makes up about 5%. The rest are mainly Germanic.
The word politician is derived from the Greek word 'polis', which means 'city'. The word entered the English language through Latin.