Why is Latin considered dead language?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: No native speakers remain today
No native speakers remain today ✓ — Correct! A 'dead language' has no native speakers—no one grows up speaking it at home. Latin evolved into Romance languages (Italian, Spanish, French, Portuguese, Romanian) over centuries, so no modern community speaks classical Latin natively. It's still used in science, law, and Vatican, but as a learned language, not a living one.
Too difficult for people to learn — Wrong. Latin isn't dead because of difficulty. It's 'dead' because no community speaks it natively—it evolved into Italian, Spanish, French, etc. Over centuries. Latin is still taught and used in specific contexts (science, law, Catholic Church), but no children learn it as their first language.
Writing system was forgotten — Wrong. We know Latin writing very well—it became the Roman alphabet used in English and many languages. Latin is 'dead' because it has no native speakers—it evolved into Romance languages. It's still studied extensively.
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