The script of English language is Roman
It's because the English language is in part derived from the Latin language and Latin was the language spoken by the Romans.
The language of ancient Rome was Latin. English is an evolved language based on Latin, German, Spanish, Gaelic, French, and numerous colloquialisms.
Latin derived words made their way into English through the Roman empire.
There is no such thing as a Roman language. The Romans were Latins, spoke in Latin ans used the Latin alphabet. 'a' is 'a' in Latin. English uses a modified version of the Latin alphabet
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.
"Inter mundos" is a Latin phrase, which means "between worlds" in English. Latin was the language of the Roman Empire and has been widely used as a scholarly and scientific language throughout history.
The language of the Roman was Latin. Quomodo es?
Roman works of literature are written in Latin because it was the official language of the Roman republic (later the Roman Empire). However, there probably was a difference between the formal Latin used in literature and the language spoke by the Romans.
Roman Catholicism is a branch of Christianity, not a language. So, no it isn't a latin based language.
In a way. Latin was the language of the Ancient Romans, although no one refers to their language as 'Roman.' It's strictly Latin.
There is no English alphabet: English is written with the Latin alphabet. as of the 21st Century, more languages use Latin-based alphabets than any other (more than 1000 languages).