>>44919408and the "Scientific Revolution". A lot of words were created to describe new instruments and inventions. (E.g. Telescopium, Microscopium). However, the importance of Latin in education started to decline with compulsory education and movements like the French Revolution and the Revolutions of 1848. This leaves us in the "Contemporary Era". People (starting in the UK) realized that they should speak Latin as it had originally been pronounced, creating the "Restored Classical Pronunciation" (as opposed to the "Ecclesiastical Pronunciation"). Latin Wikipedia and the Holy See are the two major authoritative sources on Latin in modern times.) But the regionality of Ancient Greek is worse than Latin. Attic, Ionian, Doric, Cypriot Greek all had different rules for spelling and different lexicons.
What was I talking about again? There's really more than one "Latin". My mind is blank.