1. Latin
Do you know Latin?
Latin is a dead language.
Baseball is a popular sport in several Latin American countries.
I hear Latin music is taking the music industry by storm this year.
Ph.D. is an abbreviation of the Latin phrase - philosophiae doctoratum.
I do my English homework in Latin, my Latin in Economics, and my Economics before school.
The Romans would never have had enough time for conquering the world if they had first been required to study Latin.
Shakespeare knew only a little Latin, but he put the little he knew to very good use.
The greatest number came from Europe, but many also came from Latin America, Asia, Africa, Australia, and Canada.
Such languages as French, Italian and Spanish come from Latin.
I don't agree with the theory that one should learn Latin in order to better understand English.
Fork-users are mainly in Europe, North America, and Latin America; chopstick-users in eastern Asia and finger-users in Africa, the Middle East, Indonesia, and India.
I like Latin music.
In the Middle Ages Latin temporarily assured linguistic equal opportunity in the fields of religion, culture and science.
The parallel with English becomes even more striking when we realize that Latin continued to be used for many hundreds of years more as the world's first "international language."