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  1. After the decentralization of political power in late antiquity, Latin developed locally in the Western provinces into branches that became the Romance languages, including Spanish, Portuguese, French, Italian, Catalan, Occitan, Aromanian and Romanian.

  2. Nov 11, 2017 · The Romans of the western half of the empire never stopped speaking Latin, but Latin diverged, eventually becoming the Romance languages of today. So what language did the Romans speak? Some of them spoke Latin.

  3. Nov 13, 2015 · Yet there is another question, less frequently discussed but certainly no less important: how did Latin become the language of the Roman Empire in the first place? After all, it was hardly the only language in the Apennine peninsula (modern Italy) when Rome was rising to power.

  4. But what did the Romans sound like? Kirk Dou­glas ’ Spar­ta­cus? Or Lau­rence Olivier’s Cras­sus? The recent series Rome upheld the tra­di­tion of British accents. Ani­ma­tor Josh Rud­der of NativLang did a fair amount of dig­ging in ser­vice of find­ing out What Latin Sound­ed Like, above.

  5. First, we may say that the Romans brought the principle of translation to its fullest development: 5 Latin literature was from its beginnings a translation not only from Greek to Latin (e.g. Livius Andronicus’ translation of the Odyssey and

  6. Apr 26, 2013 · In the Introduction (1-16) McElduff, after illustrating the principal focus of her research (Roman literary translations from Greek), reviews some of the past approaches to Roman translation, 1 the interrelation of translation and intertextuality, which is crucial to Latin literature, and the specificity of Roman translation practices, which ...

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