Evolution. After the fall of the Roman Empire, languages evolved into local variants of the Latin tongue, producing our modern Romance languages. (It's technically not completely extinct, since the Roman Catholic Church releases "official" updates to the language every so often.)
...all the treasure on the ship has be plundered.
Latin speakers became dead.
no its a dead language
it means that the dead language Latin is now dead
Latin is a dead language so, technically, there is no Latin pronunciation.
Latin is a dead foreign language along with Ancient Greek.
Latin's a dead language. You don't say anything in it.
Example: "Latin is now a dead language."
Latin is commonly known as a 'dead language' because no one currently speaks it as their native language (their first language, mother tongue, etc.). However, there are a small number of fluent Latin-speakers.
Certainly. Many Latin classes today practice speaking the Latin language. However, Latin is commonly known as a "dead language" because it is no longer spoken as a native language.
Most of the scientific names for animals are derived from Latin language. Latin is, however, considered a dead language.
Primarily Latin and greek, although greek isn't dead.
Unlike English, no words are being added in Latin. This makes Latin a dead language because it isn't being "developed" anymore. One reason Latin is considered 'dead' is that it is not being used by a society. The people that spoke it everyday are 'dead' and no one grows up speaking it.