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Why is Latin a dead language if people still speak it?
Latin is now considered a dead language, meaning it’s still used in specific contexts, but does not have any native speakers. Not coincidentally, each language developed in former territories of the Western Roman Empire. When that empire failed, Latin died, and the new languages were born.
Is there anywhere that still speaks Latin?
Latin is still the official language of one internationally-recognised sovereign state – the Vatican City. It is not only the language of official documents, but is often spoken among prelates who have no modern language in common.
Why do people say no one speaks Latin anymore?
People don’t say no one speaks Latin. It’s common knowledge, especially in the Catholic community, that the Pope and other religious people in Vatican City speak it (a modern Ecclesiastical Latin). What people actually say is that Latin is a dead language, because no one speaks it as native language.
Why do some people say Latin is a dead language?
What people actually say is that Latin is a dead language, because no one speaks it as native language. Because next to no one speaks it as a first language, almost no one speaks it fluently outloud in conversations with others. That’s why. It’s all over the place in many languages, and lots of people study it for years in school.
Is Latin an extinct language?
It should be noted that this is different from an extinct language, which no longer has any speakers at all. Latin falls into the former category, but certainly not the latter (more on that in the next section).
What happened to Latin?
Vulgar Latin, essentially a simplified version of the mother tongue, survived for a while but diverged more and more as it folded in various local languages. By the end of the sixth century, people from different sections of the former empire could no longer understand each other. Latin had died as a living language.