A “dead” language is one no longer learned as a first language or used in ordinary communication. Classical Latin, the language of Cicero and Virgil, became “dead” after its form became fixed, whereas Vulgar Latin, the language most Romans ordinarily used, continued to evolve as it spread across the western Roman Empire, gradually becoming the Romance languages.
Why is Latin a dead language?
Why is Latin used for scientific taxonomy?
Latin was the lingua franca of scientific work in the West during the Middle Ages, so Western scientists used Latin for naming species of organisms. During the 18th century Swedish naturalist Carolus Linnaeus simplified this practice by creating binomial nomenclature, whereby an organism is identified by genus and species names, both of which are Latinized words.