Latin ancient books

Tribes living in the Nordic wasteland and using primitive Indo-European languages began to split and migrate between about 3500 BC and 2500 BC, and some of them settled in the Aegean region, calling themselves Greeks, and their language was Greek. Some settled in the middle of the Italian peninsula and claimed to be Latin. Their language was Latin.

After thousands of years of evolution, Greek has not changed much, only some changes in pronunciation have become modern Greek today.

With the expansion of the Roman Empire established by Latin, Latin was widely used in most parts of Europe. After the disintegration of the Roman Empire, Latin also dissociated from many dialects, gradually combined with local dialects and evolved into today's French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, Romanian and so on.

Jews belong to the Semitic people in the Middle East, and they come down in one continuous line since ancient times and use Hebrew. By 70 BC, the country was destroyed by Rome, the capital Jerusalem was destroyed, Jews were scattered all over the world, and Hebrew disappeared.

By the end of 19, Israel finally restored its motherland, and a young Jew, Ben yehuda, decided to revive Hebrew. Through decades of unremitting efforts, Hebrew has finally been reborn from ancient books and become the official language of Israel.

Hebrew today is no different from that of 3000 years ago.

Answer by hand, not reproduced.