The irony of a zeroth class in Latin when the Romans had no concept of "zero". Also, that's not one but two chances he missed to explain that "Caesar" is pronounced "KI-sar", which is why the Germans have the word "Kaiser".
Hi, can you speak vulgar latin? Real latin is of interest to me as I am corcened in understanding better my own lanuage. Hypotetical latin, makes me no good. If you do, could you please broadcast a course of this like (vulgar latin).
Hi my friend, can you identify Latin words for me within a sequence of letters that have no spaces between them? Some of the words are spelled backwards, this much I know. I'm happy to pay, it's also only one page (65 individual letters). I'm trying to find the most coherent message within the text. Reach out if you can help. Thanks in advance for any reply on this matter, Alex :)
Seriously?... I'm learning latin with you in spanish xd, and i wanted to know more about the language, so i searched in englih, and i found you again but in english
Apenas encontré tu canal, y me gusta tu método de enseñanza. Hablo español, inglés, francés, un poquito de árabe, pero para mis estudios ahora para un libro escribo, no me gusta leer traducciones de autores latinos mas el idioma original así que yo decidí aprender el latín. Gracias por tus vídeos.
Hi! I've just started studying Latin for my college choir (there are a bunch of aesthetic religious choir works in Latin!). I will follow your playlist. Thank you so much!
Hi. Im a self taught latin students and I have made my own channel and got 100 subs in a week. I see that you put in so much effort into your channel and even made websites for people to refrence for information about latin! However I see that you still stuck at 37 Subs. I'll give you one extra sub, Good Work!! Love your Content!
dude. First case Nominative, second case Genitiv, third case Dativ, fourth case Accusative, fifth case vokativ, sixth case Ablativ, not only is any other order WRONG but so FUCKING confusing to try to learn seeing it mixed like that
And yet he spent five years of study in obtaining degrees in classical philology - literally the scientific study of the language itself. (In other words, without the classes on Roman empire, literature, politics, etc.) So in choosing between the two of you, my vote is with him.
I do not think that C is always [k] ... C is [k] like = cūr, sīc, ecce... but infront of E, I and Y, AE, OE it is just C - Cicero, Caecilius, Coelius etc. I am at very beginning so please, don't take me too seriously, I just want to know the correct way, I am using official czech high school book and this is kinda confusing for me .
H is def not silent, the romans themselves were proud that they did not have "useless" letters in their alphabet, being a practical race, the Romans believed every letter had to have a purpose or not exit.
@lafinafinvenkisto You say "whom" because you learned exact English grammar: who (nominative), whom (accusative), whom (dative), whose (genitive). The vast majority of native English-speakers wouldn't what the hell I just wrote.
@@latinfromscratch Okay, thank you for letting me know. I started my journey learning and studying a couple months ago. At least I know how long it might take 😮💨
If "c" is always hard, presumably they didn't need "k"? In British English no problem with the diphthong pronunciation; if we want both letters pronounced, they are marked with a "trema": as in "Noël", but we spell "encyclopaedia" with the same pronunciation as the Americans (almost!). Nominative=subject (he); Accusative=object (him); Genitive=possessive (his) and the Dative=indirect object (to him)
Cyntisis.lerarning now basic of.prononsiation of the will be linguish weare inthe year most imprtant quite easy kikodo guqualesys prononced sun quessi at least clssic pronounced pronounced practiceing iou english
Let me see if get this right: the g in Latin is pronounced as in German “geh”? Well then I’m ahead in the game I speak and write German #Latin&Classics
Am a beginner and this video was grateful am really interested in learning Latin amma have to keep up with you u have such good videos 👍 and am hoping to understand the language in the near future hope i dont get lazy 🤲
thank you for the lesson ✨ I wanted to ask you if Google correctly translated the phrase "physician for soul and body" as "medicus pro anima et corpore"?
I am so confused about the sequence of the classes. I've listened to a number of classes but now I find that I don't know if I'm in the right class of the sequence. There's no webpage that I can find that lists the classes and the titles of the classes so that one can know if one has skipped any classes or not.
This might be a silly question... but how do you know which declension a particular word is in .. ? So how do you know how a certain noun needs to be conjugated? Thanks :)
You check the singular genitive of the word, the singular genitive is unique in every declination. On a dictionary the singular genitive declination of the word should be present next to the singular nominative (which is what you would initially look for while skimming through the vocabulary)
Most latin speakers and other ignorants have the custom of speaking Latin with an Italian accent and claiming that Latin is a precedent of Italian. That literally pisses me off. Because most of those are not specialized in anything besides ignoran-tism. I heard from many teachers of Latin, including I spoke to a Italian which was my professor of violin and he went to MENSA and received a score of 400 which more than the most. He clearly said to me "Latin has nothing to do with Italian sound, by the way it's more close to Portuguese". Because the vowels and consonants in Portuguese have no historical accent, and Latin doesn't have any historical accent. The idea of mixing Italy, a country founded in 1861(Italy) after many separated provinces from many different Indo-Europeans that were considered small countries with different political and cultural views. And Rome founded in 753 BCE which collapsed in 5 CE. It separated. It became extinct. And there's a gap of 13 centuries between Italy and Rome. Still very ignorantly and start to say "Italy around 2 CE" and "..and the Romans separated leaving Italy" Like !!!!!!!!! WTF! Culturally biased? No one knows for sure now how Roman sounds but it doesn't sound Italian. And the ones who insist that it was almost close to Italian are going backwards in history. Rome could be anywhere, it could have been in London, France, the islands of Greece and that wouldn't make any of these countries Roman-like because the location doesn't define a culture. Besides, Romans came from the greeks and a mix of other cultures. The phrase "all romans make Italians but not all Italians make romans" speaks a lot and it's an old phrase. The reason why many still do not speak Latin (churches, groups of music) with an Italian accent it's because they're not. I'm done here, the ones lacking information need to grab a couple books and maps of history. Besides I dind't watched this full video, I heard he speaking Latin and speaking very well Latin, but I believe he's italian and cannot remove the accent, nor I am implying you should completely remove your accent because i believe the mix of the cultures, every single culture holds a piece of truth how real latin would sound like today.
Somebody asked me on the cobblestone streets of conquered Dacia a couple thousand years ago "sus cum morbo ius 🥸?" and now I get it. I was morbin and he wasn't. That's how I got to witness the spanish inquisituion, the battle of Los Angeles, the impaling of the turks thanks to Vlad Țepeș a.k.a. "the impaler morb" and the fall of communism in 1989. Thank you latino man. Morbin tiem