First of all.. Hi everybody! I'm new here and haven't been practising my latin and greek for a few years but I'm very interested in pickin it up again..<br /><br />Concerning this topic, I believe that speaking latin in a class is not that useful.. from what I know, the latin that we learn and translate was purposely meant to be a written language or used orally only for official porpouses, while spoken latin was very very different.. not only because of the vocabulary (think "equus" for the written latin and "caballus" for the spoken latin) but also for a different way of building up a sentence.. I think that if we had the chance to get to know how the real spoken latin was, then it would make sense to try to speak it.. but as of now, I see a spoken latin as a too artificial way of learning.. In fact, when you start studying latin at school here, you do have a dictionary to translate from italian to latin BUT teachers usually give you such translations for the first month to say the most.. just to practise verbs and declinations.. after that, it's just from latin to italian or, after a year, from latin to greek..<br />The fact that the Curia still uses latin, does not mean that they speak latin.. again, it's used for official documents and ecclesisatic law.. believe me, I was born, live and have been studying latin and greek in Rome and I know what goes on in the Vaticans

<br /><br />Just a question: is there a key to understand the symbols you use to represent greek words? I haven't downloaded any book for I have soooo many already, but I was wondering if there was a key to understand! Thanks!<br />