No, modern Egyptians speak and write Arabic using the Arabic script.
Ancient Egyptians do not exist today. Modern Egyptians read and write Arabic, which is the national language of Egypt.
There are no "Ancient Egyptians" today; only "Modern Egyptians". As a result, the question as posed is unanswerable. Currently, 29% of Modern Egyptians or roughly 24 million Egyptians, farm.
As a whole, the general public. Whatever is most popular, will automatically become the modern way to speak the language.
Which egptians do you have in mind? the egyptians in the time of the pharos or the modern egyptian today
The majority of Latin Americans in the Western Hemisphere speak Spanish as their first language.
In Europe, at the very least, Indo-Europeans squeezed out a lot of native populations--which is why Basque is a language isolate today--and resulted the wide swath of countries that speak Indo-European languages today.
About 417 million people today speak Spanish.
The same that they speak now, depending on where they live.....
The people living in Romania speak in 1900 the Romanian language, as today and also probable in the future.
The Chippewa Indians traditionally speak Ojibwe, an Algonquian language. Today, many Chippewa people also speak English.
Yes. Modern English as a language has been spoken since about 1500. It was the only language Shakespeare and his audiences spoke and is of course the same language we speak today. Some people find Shakespeare's plays to be difficult primarily because he used a huge vocabulary and a poetic style to write his plays. He also wrote long and complex sentences from time to time.