It is presumed that he went to school, and the most obvious suspect is the King's Grammar school in Stratford which covered in their curriculum exactly the things that Shakespeare appears to have learned, including reading and writing both English and Latin.
Latin
He learned small Latin and less Greek according to Ben Jonson.
Latin mostly, as well as divinity and a certain amount of arithmetic. He was taught his letters and basic catechism in a dame school (taught at home by a woman) before moving on to grammar school.
The Shakespeare Birthplace Trust website says this: "At the Shakespeare Centre in Stratford-upon-Avon, which is the headquarters of the International Shakespeare Association, the library collection in 1999 included the Complete Works in more than 30 languages and individual editions of the plays and poems in over 80 languages, from Arabic and Albanian to Yakut and Zulu."
He could read and write the English language. It also helped, when writing plays, that he had a practical knowledge of how theatres worked. His ability to read Latin and probably French (see Henry V, partly written in that language) gave him access to lots of plots he could steal.
Latin
A great part of his school curriculum was devoted to the study of Latin and to literature written in that language. He also knew some Greek, and probably French as well.
At school, when he was 7-15 years old.
English language just like how we learn to speak:Spanish,Chinese,and Latin
If you speak Greek you can read it ... you have to learn it the same as you learn any writing.
Simply because Latin was the language spoken in Genoa when he was born !
It is a word from the latin. Latin is like the most used language on earth, because almost everyword comes from latin it is amazing so go and learn latin.
Latin is a hard language to learn, and it can be hard to remember all translations. The Latin words for healer are Medicum and medice.
You can learn that Shakespeare wrote romantic comedies long before anyone else was writing romantic comedies.
To learn a language, immerse yourself in it by practicing consistently, watching movies or reading books in that language, using language learning apps, finding a language exchange partner, and taking language classes. Practice speaking, listening, reading, and writing to improve your skills. Consistency and practice are key to language acquisition.
I don't know BUT it helps to learn Latin because then it is easier to understand all the others because they are similar, in ways, to Latin.
He learned small Latin and less Greek according to Ben Jonson.