Seeing as "lingua" is the Latin word for "language", "lingua" in Latin would be "lingua."
The root word of linguistic is "lingua," which means tongue in Latin.
The first lingua franca was likely Akkadian, an ancient Semitic language used in the Mesopotamian region around 2500 BCE for trade, diplomacy, and communication between different cultures. It later evolved into Aramaic which became a major lingua franca in the Near East.
This phrase in Latin means "Through Latin, we enhance our knowledge of our own language." It emphasizes the value of studying Latin to improve one's understanding of modern languages.
Il nome della lingua in italiano è "lingua" o "lingua italiana".
Latin and potentially Greek in some areas.
In Latin 'lingua' means language
'Language' in Latin is 'lingua.'
No. The Latin word for "tongue" is lingua.
Lingua (literally, "tongue").
As one of the two lingua francas - Latin and Greek.
As one of the two lingua francas - Latin and Greek.
Tongue or language.
the word lingua came from Latin.
Mono = one, Greek Lingua = tongue, Latin
Hibernia (Ireland) Lingua Hibernica (language)
The Romans called their language "lingua Latina".
The Latin word for tongue is 'lingua.' Derivatives of it include: linguistic, multilingual, bilingual, sublingual, linguiform.