Yes, French is mainly derived from Latin as spoken in Gaul when it was part of the Roman Empire.
Latin. French, Spanish, Portuguese, and Italian are Romance languages that evolved from Latin, the language of ancient Rome.
Latin words come from the country of Italy. Latin was the language of the ancient Romans and is the precursor to the Romance languages such as Italian, French, and Spanish.
French and Spanish both evolved from Latin, which was the language of the Roman Empire. Over time, Latin developed into different dialects, eventually giving rise to the distinct languages of French and Spanish.
french is derived from latin therefore it is a latin language.
"Latin" is spelled the same way in both French and English.
French/Latin
French derives from vulgar latin.
during 1624
It has a Latin etymology, but is also of French origin.
Because the LANGUAGE derives from Latin, the actual French people come from the Romans.
French is a romance language, meaning it came from Latin. Specifically, it comes from vernacular (spoken, vulgar, day-to-day, what soldiers use) Latin, and has been greatly simplified since (and changed, of course).
Latin. French, Spanish, Portuguese, and Italian are Romance languages that evolved from Latin, the language of ancient Rome.
Latin words come from the country of Italy. Latin was the language of the ancient Romans and is the precursor to the Romance languages such as Italian, French, and Spanish.
medieval french & indirectly latin
french from italy
French and Spanish both evolved from Latin, which was the language of the Roman Empire. Over time, Latin developed into different dialects, eventually giving rise to the distinct languages of French and Spanish.
Crime came from the Old French and from the Old French from Latin.