It is: ROMA We have the exact same alphabet as the ancient Romans.
ROMANI or TROIUGENA
roman
Just the way you spell them today. They haven't changed. The only change was from the Greek to the Roman.
Yes, the word Roman is a noun, a person of Rome. Roman is a proper noun and also a proper adjective that describes a noun as of or from Rome, for example Roman architecture.
St. Paul was being tried by the Roman governor of Israel. He told them that, since he was a Roman citizen by birth, he had a right under Roman law to appeal to the emperor in Rome. He was thus sent to Rome for trial.
Ͱερμης
Rome was the conqueror of Cleopatra's Egypt and the government changed. After Cleopatra, Egypt became a Roman province and was governed under Roman law with Roman officials replacing the Greek officials. Taxes were paid to Rome rather than to a pharaoh.
The proper adjective is Roman (of or from Rome, or the Roman Empire).The sound-alike word is roaming (moving about).
Rome is not traditionally spelled out using Roman numerals. Roman numerals are used to represent numbers in ancient Rome, not for spelling out words.
Just the way you spell them today. They haven't changed. The only change was from the Greek to the Roman.
How about VI = 6 in Roman numerals
MAXIMVS The Romans didn't have a u in their alphabet.
Yes, you're reading it right now. The Roman alphabet was the same as ours except it did not have the letters J and W. The letters Y and Z were added near the end of the republic to spell words of Greek origin.Yes, you're reading it right now. The Roman alphabet was the same as ours except it did not have the letters J and W. The letters Y and Z were added near the end of the republic to spell words of Greek origin.Yes, you're reading it right now. The Roman alphabet was the same as ours except it did not have the letters J and W. The letters Y and Z were added near the end of the republic to spell words of Greek origin.Yes, you're reading it right now. The Roman alphabet was the same as ours except it did not have the letters J and W. The letters Y and Z were added near the end of the republic to spell words of Greek origin.Yes, you're reading it right now. The Roman alphabet was the same as ours except it did not have the letters J and W. The letters Y and Z were added near the end of the republic to spell words of Greek origin.Yes, you're reading it right now. The Roman alphabet was the same as ours except it did not have the letters J and W. The letters Y and Z were added near the end of the republic to spell words of Greek origin.Yes, you're reading it right now. The Roman alphabet was the same as ours except it did not have the letters J and W. The letters Y and Z were added near the end of the republic to spell words of Greek origin.Yes, you're reading it right now. The Roman alphabet was the same as ours except it did not have the letters J and W. The letters Y and Z were added near the end of the republic to spell words of Greek origin.Yes, you're reading it right now. The Roman alphabet was the same as ours except it did not have the letters J and W. The letters Y and Z were added near the end of the republic to spell words of Greek origin.
Those letters spell natural.
The Latin alphabet of Rome had 23 letters, and the English alphabet uses 26 letters.
The letters in "these letters" can spell the phrase "ether settles." The letters can spell shorter words such as trestles, sheerest, shelters, and treeless.
Those letters will spell strum.
Those letters will spell exciting.
Those letters will spell stigma.