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Latin and English: Cognates 

Professor Dave Explains
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Now that we know how to pronounce words in Latin, let's look at some cognates shared with English. This will really highlight the difference in phonetics between the two languages, since some of these words are spelled identically, but pronounced differently!
Script by Patrizia Farina, Professor of Italian at Western Connecticut State University and Purchase College.
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3 мар 2024

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Комментарии : 51   
@hipe8987
@hipe8987 8 дней назад
i just found your channel and im so excited. cant wait to learn everything, the only problem is that in some playlists it says that many videos are unavailable, for example in "latin" playlist as much as 22 videos are unavailable and hidden from the playlist. i don't understand why that is. i really wish I could watch all fo them. : (
@ProfessorDaveExplains
@ProfessorDaveExplains 8 дней назад
They are released on a schedule don’t worry you’ll get them all
@jamiegallier2106
@jamiegallier2106 2 месяца назад
Much appreciated.❤
@adriani9432
@adriani9432 2 месяца назад
These are not cognates. Instead these are loanwords, which are words English adopted from Latin or a Latin-derived language like Norman French. An example of a cognate is the English word "mother" and the Latin word "mater". The English word is not derived from Latin, but both mater and mother are derived from a common Indo-European root.
@objective_psychology
@objective_psychology 2 месяца назад
The word “cognate” on its own is often used very loosely to just mean “something related”
@DrPonner
@DrPonner 2 месяца назад
​@@objective_psychology by who? I don't often hear people use "cognate" outside of language-related (e.g. linguistics, language learning, conlanging, etc.) circles and those circles use cognate strictly in OP's sense and "loanword" otherwise.
@objective_psychology
@objective_psychology 2 месяца назад
@@DrPonner I meant in the context of linguistics, so related as in a linguistic type of relationship
@UnrealPerson
@UnrealPerson 2 месяца назад
Or (I think) English "way" and Latin "via".
@sethhatfield6293
@sethhatfield6293 Месяц назад
Behold, the classic “erm look at me I’m so smart! Because I can spew semi-coherent pedantic nonsense and pretend to have my big gotcha moment!” All loanwords fall under the umbrella of cognates. Not all cognates however are loanwords. It’s literally that simple. You’re not as smart as you think you are, you’re just a clown trying to pretend that you have a shred of intellect to offer.
@harithanam8551
@harithanam8551 2 месяца назад
hearing pure Latin for the first time why does every word sound so epic??? i just want to speak dramatic Latin now ❤ new hobby thanks Dave
@gabor6259
@gabor6259 2 месяца назад
You're gonna love the polýMathy channel.
@Skeazy_L
@Skeazy_L Месяц назад
Its not pure Latin, ex. militia = Militsia
@DanielMWJ
@DanielMWJ 2 месяца назад
For those wondering, the \-io words becoming \-ion in English because \-ion- is the stem form, which is what it is ultimately from. (As from a declined form) It's not just completely random or anything.
@DrPonner
@DrPonner 2 месяца назад
I figured it was cuz that's how those types of words ended up in French
@johndoe5061
@johndoe5061 2 месяца назад
Great stuff Dave... always love your stuff!
@AnarchoReptiloidUa
@AnarchoReptiloidUa 2 месяца назад
Thank you for this informative and interesting video. ❤❤❤
@BonesyTucson
@BonesyTucson 2 месяца назад
Thank you for not using ecclesiastical latin, and using reconstructed classical!
@waelfadlallah8939
@waelfadlallah8939 2 месяца назад
I was the very first to distinguish Professor Dave's astonishing pronunciation capabilities. Little did i know, it will turn into a new lovely series
@cspahn3221
@cspahn3221 2 месяца назад
I started ordering books on how to teach myself Latin right when you starting making this series, much thanks
@mohamedtaqi6322
@mohamedtaqi6322 2 месяца назад
Latin sounds so clean and epic... beautiful language.
@mbberry135
@mbberry135 2 месяца назад
Jecerunt does have cognate in English. Eject, Project I have been looking for that word for a while. That You.
@UnrealPerson
@UnrealPerson 2 месяца назад
Yeet
@zmohamas
@zmohamas 2 месяца назад
Thank you, ❤❤❤
@RaissaMUTUYEMALIYA
@RaissaMUTUYEMALIYA 2 месяца назад
Thanks ❤
@petersage5157
@petersage5157 2 месяца назад
Fun fact: If a word appears to be a cognate but has entirely different meanings and etymologies in different languages, it's called a "false friend." Pulcherrimus seems to be a near cognate of pulchritudinous, which is a "well-lettered" word for beautiful.
@eastvandb
@eastvandb 2 месяца назад
I was going to bring up "Pulchritude", but your example is way better.
@petersage5157
@petersage5157 2 месяца назад
@@eastvandb Same church, different pew; Dave's example was the noun version. They all derive from pulcher. Still, Dave's right in that the English equivalent isn't in common use. By the way..."you're"? ;p I'll chalk that up to a hasty autocomplete.
@eastvandb
@eastvandb 2 месяца назад
@@petersage5157 I have no excuse! I was typing on a keyboard. But too much texting has made me sloppy. I'm going to correct that now, so as not to appear too foolish to future generations.
@DrPonner
@DrPonner 2 месяца назад
Like Spanish molestar = "to bother" and not "to molest"
@rheiagreenland4714
@rheiagreenland4714 2 месяца назад
Actually, the way I've heard it, "False Friend" can mean that, but it can also just mean two words which etymologically are cognates but just happen to have different meanings in their different languages. "False Cognates" would probably be better to use if you specifically mean that they don't share a common origin. Not an expert on this kind of terminology though
@biology6034
@biology6034 2 месяца назад
HE
@yugimotobutjacked3231
@yugimotobutjacked3231 2 месяца назад
Opinion on the legality of gasses used in Vietnam and Korean wars by US forces?
@yugimotobutjacked3231
@yugimotobutjacked3231 2 месяца назад
Opinion on Sloot Digital Coding System and general concept of converting digital data to an analog keyed format. (i.e both systems know the key of data being sent and need only display parameters, similar to adobe post script)
@briankane6547
@briankane6547 2 месяца назад
Happy new Hair-do. 😉
@deepakk1347
@deepakk1347 2 месяца назад
Hey 🤗
@theprimagen
@theprimagen 2 месяца назад
Love species pronunciation lol
@OldBenOne
@OldBenOne 2 месяца назад
Pulcherrimus video.
@fatimahaidari
@fatimahaidari 2 месяца назад
I am the most present student😂❤
@HilevyAlfredsdotter
@HilevyAlfredsdotter 2 месяца назад
There is a leader of a swedish political party that don't think we been to moon, and he can't just denie that there can be a possibility that the earth is flat. We so lucky that this party only is 0,08 % big😅 What a moron😂
@yedder7628
@yedder7628 2 месяца назад
I wasn’t first
@briankane6547
@briankane6547 2 месяца назад
Latin, pronounced Latn?
@RicardoMorenoAlmeida
@RicardoMorenoAlmeida 2 месяца назад
I was under the impression that the letter J only appeared in the 1500's. If that's correct, janitor and junior should be spelled ianitor and iunior.... 🤷‍♂
@Langwigcfijul
@Langwigcfijul 2 месяца назад
True, but modern convention has the sound /y/ as 'J', just like /w/ and /u/ are written as 'V' and 'U' but during the classical period are both 'V'.
@peterwyetzner5276
@peterwyetzner5276 Месяц назад
It's really the same letter as I. If you look at most Latin dictionaries, they will use the J instead of an I when it falls at the beginning of words, as in juro or justitia. But the Oxford Latin Dictionary, which is now the most authoritative, decided to go back to the classical use of I in all cases, so iuro and iustitia.
@fakepng1
@fakepng1 2 месяца назад
Lirerally 🏛
@Xamaza
@Xamaza 2 месяца назад
people dont like latin :D
@Menemen98
@Menemen98 2 месяца назад
Turkish is extremely similar with everything.
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