Aristotle did not use Latin as his official language; he lived in ancient Greece and primarily wrote in Greek. Latin became more prevalent in philosophy during the time of the Roman Empire, but Aristotle's works were originally in Greek and then translated into Latin later on.
No, Pig Latin is not an official language of any country. It is a playful way of altering English words by moving the first consonant or consonant cluster of a word to the end, followed by adding 'ay'.
Latin is a dead language that is no longer spoken as a native language in any country in the world. However, many modern languages, such as Spanish, French, Italian, Portuguese, and Romanian, have evolved from Latin and are spoken in various countries.
The official language is the language that is mostly used in official departments. In many countries it is also the spoken language. However, in many countries it could be different than the spoken language(s) there. That happens sometime in small countries that use a more common language than their native language for official use. However, it may also occur in countries where the official language is not the common spoken language, such as in the Arab World where the spoken languages are remarkably different from Arabic, the official language there.
In Germany, Austria and Liechtenstein it is the sole official language. In Switzerland, Luxembourg, Belgium and the Province of Bolzano-Bozen (Italy) it is a joint official language.
No you cant use pig latin in Microsoft 2007
They are used in the Vatican City whereas Latin is the official spoken language and Roman numerals are the arithmetical aspect of the Latin language.
It is still spoken as an official language in the Vatican.--Note that Latin is rarely "spoken" as a language in modern times-(I don't think they speak it much at the Vatican either, though I may be mistaken)The official language of Vatican City is Latin, (I think Italian is as well)They use French as a diplomatic language, and the Swiss Guard, in which commands on parade are given in German, also uses French and Italian in all it's official ceremonies.(Latin isn't used much, is my point)(Though I may be wrong, maybe the pope has conversations in the telephone in Latin!...)Other than the Holy See, Latin was the official language of Hungary until 1844, though it was probably not spoken as an official language, people there spoke, what I am guessing is Hungarian. (Though the Hungarian Empire was quite big at the time and people most likely spoke a number of languages, but that's not important..)
There are many courts in the U.S. that use Latin as their official language.
No, Pig Latin is not an official language of any country. It is a playful way of altering English words by moving the first consonant or consonant cluster of a word to the end, followed by adding 'ay'.
Catholicism is a religion, not a country or ethnicity. Catholics don't have an official language. In former times, mass was celebrated in Latin, but that ended 40 years ago and Catholics use the language of their country.
The Roman empire had one official language and that was Latin. However the well educated spoke Greek because the Greek language was the lingua franca of the diplomatic world. For example, an envoy from Parthia may not be fluent in Latin, but he could speak Greek and would use that language to converse with a Roman senator who did not speak Parthian.
Latin is a dead language that is no longer spoken as a native language in any country in the world. However, many modern languages, such as Spanish, French, Italian, Portuguese, and Romanian, have evolved from Latin and are spoken in various countries.
Officially they have 2 Alphabets in Kenya:The English version of the Latin AlphabetThe Swahili version of the Latin Alphabet
official language is German That one language.
No. The ancient Greek did not use the English language. Because there was no English language in that time. English language derived from Latin which was the official language of Roman Empire and the Roman Empire is the successor of ancient Greek the golden age of Greece.
The official language is the language that is mostly used in official departments. In many countries it is also the spoken language. However, in many countries it could be different than the spoken language(s) there. That happens sometime in small countries that use a more common language than their native language for official use. However, it may also occur in countries where the official language is not the common spoken language, such as in the Arab World where the spoken languages are remarkably different from Arabic, the official language there.
Example: "Latin is now a dead language."