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Psychopompos
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03 Mar 2010, 4:24 pm

Lecks wrote:
Vae victus?

I got it from a game, so it's probably not even latin. :lol:


The historical sentence is Vae Victis. :wink: It means "Woe to the vanquished" and has been pronounced in 390 BC by a Gaul warlord who besieged and defeated Rome.

"Vae victus" is the same in singular. Might not be historical, but grammatically correct. ;)

"Ave Caesar, morituri te salutant !"
"Hail Caesar, those who'll die salute you" - scream of gladiators before fighting. "Caesar" is one of the title of Roman emperor and one part of the surname of the first of them.

"Requiescat in Pace"
"Rest in peace"


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Valoyossa
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03 Mar 2010, 6:08 pm

I have big picture in my head ignorantia iuris nocet.
And my History teacher speaking before writing bad note dura lex, sed lex.
And my cousin's lagena vinorum pulchra et formosa est.
My own tubulus tuum intra occulum and salve, colli! :D

And tomorrow I will see one building from bus window. There's Latin sentece, but I didn't see it well last week. But it's about law again.

I also remember from one book spiritus flat ubi vult.
If spiritus, there must be spiritus sanctus :D


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iamnotaparakeet
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03 Mar 2010, 10:47 pm

Mundos adnihilo.



Valoyossa
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04 Mar 2010, 6:58 am

Ok, I have seen. It is iustitias vestras iudicab :D


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ValMikeSmith
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18 Apr 2010, 9:58 pm

Homo Atexta = :spiderman: = Peter Parker 8O :?: :?: :?:



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27 Apr 2010, 3:04 am

Quantum materiae materietur marmota monax si marmota monax materiam possit materiari? 8O



SpongeBobRocksMao
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24 Jun 2010, 7:21 am

This theme tune was actually sung in Latin. :P

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-LqJD5wm2q4[/youtube]


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hans66
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04 Aug 2010, 1:17 am

iamnotaparakeet wrote:
To get an idea of Latin might have sounded like, or, at least, what spoken Latin would sound like:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GVBN0_UOL6I[/youtube]


Wow! I have never seen someone speaking Latin fluently in a setting of our modern world. That is something quite different than the Latin I hear in my (Catholic) Church!



reginaterrae
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13 Aug 2010, 9:39 am

visagrunt wrote:
loquo modo lingua Latine quem me docuit mater. [I speak the Latin my mother taught me]

I am a big fan of Latin, I have a bunch of my favourite kid-lit in Latin:

Alicia in Terra Mirabilis
Aliciae per Speculum Transitus
Ursus Nomine Paddington
Winnie ille Pu
Winnie ille Pu Semper Ludet
Quomodo Invidiosulus Nomine Grinchus Christi Natalem Abrogaverit
Harrius Potter et Philosophi Lapis
Harrius Potter et Camera Secretorum
Regulus
Tella Charlottae


How do you say, "that is just WAY too cool" in Latin? :D



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06 Oct 2010, 5:36 pm

CANIS IATRANS.


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Zitanier
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16 Nov 2010, 7:03 am

Estuans interius
ira vehementi
Estuans interius
ira vehementi
Sephiroth
Sephiroth

Sors immanis
Et inanis
Sors immanis
Et inanis


Veni, veni, venias,
Ne me mori facias
Veni, veni, venias,
Ne me mori facias

Veni, veni, venias, Gloriosa
Ne me mori facias Generosa
Veni, veni, venias, Gloriosa
Ne me mori facias Generosa

Sephiroth
Sephiroth
Sephiroth



Libelula85
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21 Nov 2010, 6:08 am

Latin is an inmortal language.



theexternvoid
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13 Jan 2011, 1:46 pm

Rosetta Stone 2 offered a basic Latin lesson if you want to learn how to speak and read it. Though it would be a primitive level. I don't know if Rosetta Stone 3 still has it.



dunbots
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13 Jan 2011, 3:23 pm

I'm glad that guy in the video uses good pronunciation. :D Has anyone heard of Father Reginald Foster? He works in the Vatican City, and he has many conversational Latin classes.

irishaspie wrote:
how difficult is it to learn?

im rather interested in the language.

I'd say all around Latin is pretty easy, especially if you are used to grammatical cases. The most difficult parts of Latin I'd say are learning the four parts of verbs, id est, the first person singular present active indicative, the active infinitive, the 1ps. perfect active indicative, and the passive perfect participle. The 3rd and 4th parts of many verbs are formed irregularly from the infinitive, but many follow a pattern. So really it just has to do with remembering words. Also, many of the third declension nouns have irregular conjugations, many of which have to be learned, but they all follow a pattern, like they add "-in-", like "nōmen, nōminis", or a medial <r> changes to <s>. You get the idea. Only a couple nouns are actually irregular in their declensions though, mainly "domus", "bōs", "deus", and "Iuppiter".

Hope that helped. :huh:



Booyakasha
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31 Jan 2011, 9:16 am

It's easy as long as you don't have to face periphrastic conjugations active and passive, ablative absolute and similar inventions of the devil himself. :?

Or until you have to translate Ovid, Cicero or even De Bello Gallico.

Not to mention scansion of the poetic meters. 8O



Lastics
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03 Apr 2011, 2:59 pm

Quote:
It's easy as long as you don't have to face periphrastic conjugations active and passive, ablative absolute and similar inventions of the devil himself.

Well active and passive are still easy to learn, wait for deponent and defective verbs :x

Quote:
Or until you have to translate Ovid, Cicero or even De Bello Gallico.

Yeah, Ovid is quite hard, although Cicero and Caesar are known to be "easy" authors, compared to Tacitus (who, unlike Cicero, likes to break sentence structure, to surprise the reader).

Quote:
Not to mention scansion of the poetic meters.

It's very hard at the beggining, but it gets easier and easier, and at the end it appears to be the light part of latin, compared to theme (translation from your language to latin /omg).