Latin -

Latin is a classical language that served as the primary tongue of the Roman Empire and remained the universal language of European scholarship, science, and law for centuries. While it is no longer a native language, its influence persists through the Romance languages and heavily informs modern English vocabulary and grammar. Language Fundamentals

: Latin is highly "inflected," meaning word endings change to indicate their role (case, tense, or gender) in a sentence. Latin is a classical language that served as

: Unlike English, word order in Latin is flexible and often used for emphasis rather than basic meaning. Modern Applications : Unlike English, word order in Latin is

: Verbs change based on person and tense (e.g., amās means "you love" without needing the pronoun "you"). : The modern English alphabet is directly derived

: Use different endings for subjects, objects, or possession (e.g., rex can mean "king," "a king," or "the king").

: The modern English alphabet is directly derived from the Latin script. Classical Latin originally used only capital letters and did not distinguish between U and V or I and J .