No, the ancient Greeks did not speak Latin. Latin was the language of the Romans, while the ancient Greeks spoke Greek.
The Latin alphabet evolved from the Etruscan alphabet, which was used by the ancient Etruscan civilization in what is now modern-day Italy. The Etruscans, in turn, borrowed the alphabet from the Greek alphabet, which had been developed by the ancient Greeks. The Latin alphabet was later adapted and expanded by the Romans and became the basis for many modern alphabets, including English.
The Ancient Greeks were the first people to speak Greek.
They speak Greek.
No, Greeks are not Roman. Greeks are the people of Greece, an ancient civilization that predates the Roman Empire. Romans are the people of Rome, an ancient civilization that grew to prominence after the Greeks.
"Loquor" is a Latin verb meaning "to speak" or "to talk." It comes from the Latin word "loqui," which also means "to speak" or "to talk."
GREEK!!!
"Well, if Italians speak Italian and Greeks speak Greek, then ancient Romans spoke Roman!" Uhhm...not quite. I have no idea what the ancient Romans called their language, but we now call it Latin, not Roman.
No, the ancient Greeks did not speak English.
Latin
Ancient Rome spoke Latin, which, as their Empire spread throughout Europe, passed through out Europe as well. The Ancient Greeks spoke a variety of different languages. Ancient Greece people speak Greek and who ever didn't know that now knows.
Yes they did.
Greek or Latin one of those
It was the Latin language
Neither. Modern western mathematics has its roots in ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia, although the Greeks gave it quite a boost.
Greeks speak the Greek language.
The ancient greeks were the first. From Latin colossus, from Ancient Greek κολοσσός (kolossos, "large statue, especially the colossus of Rhodes").
The Romans spoke Italian, Greek and Latin as it spread its empire.