All the Romance languages (Italian, French, Spanish, Portuguese and Romanian) are languages derived from vulgar Latin. Vulgar Latin was a mixture of Latin and local languages which developed in parallel with classical Latin. These evolutions were due to the fact that Latin became an extinct language and that languages evolve.
Italian is some kind of evolved Latin, so it never "replaced" Latin, it's just that the language changed somehow over time... it's exagerated, but let's say Italian is some kind of latin. Vic
The keyword "Latin" is derived from the Latin language, not Italian or Spanish.
Six English, French, Italian, Spanish, Latin, and German
You use the Western alphabet and write in Italian for present day Rome. For ancient Rome, you use the western alphabet and write in Latin.
No one invented Italian. It evolved naturally from Latin.
Italian is some kind of evolved Latin, so it never "replaced" Latin, it's just that the language changed somehow over time... it's exagerated, but let's say Italian is some kind of latin. Vic
It's closer to Italian, all are descended from Latin but French has changed the most - probably due to Celtic and Germanic influences.
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)
The keyword "Latin" is derived from the Latin language, not Italian or Spanish.
Italian is considered a descendant of Latin. Latin is the ancient language spoken by the Romans, which evolved over time to become the Italian language we know today. Italian shares many similarities with Latin in terms of vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation.
Vivere in Italian and Latin means "to live" in English.
Latin is the extinct language that is the mother of the Italian language. Italian developed from Vulgar Latin which was spoken in the region that is now Italy. Over time, Latin evolved into the distinctive language known today as Italian.
Italian but in the Vatican Latin/Italian.
Cara is an Italian equivalent of the Latin word cārā. The feminine singular adjective translates into English from Latin as "beloved" and as "dear" or "expensive" from Italian. The pronunciation will be "KA-ra" in Latin and Italian.
Italian and Latin are not the same. Italian is a modern Romance language descended from Latin, while Latin is an ancient language that was spoken in the Roman Empire. Italian has taken influence from Latin but has evolved over time into a distinct language with its own grammar, vocabulary, and pronunciation.
Italian is derived from vulgar ( that is non-Classical) Latin, with a heavy Germanic influence.
Fine is an Italian equivalent of the Latin word finis. The feminine singular noun translates literally from Italian to English as "end." The respective pronunciations will be "FEE-ney" in Italian and "fee-nihs" in Latin.