Latin: Classic Or Dud?

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What crack have you all been smoking? Latin is an absolute CLASSIC!!! In fact, one might say (Sorry, Greek) *THE* Classic!!!

I started studying it in Jr High (what age is that? 11? 12?) and continued- willingly, and sometimes being the ONLY person in my class- all the way through high school. If I hadn't got mono and dropped out, I would have had a Regents and a AP in it. (insert references to appropriate British qualifications)

Multi-culturalism aside for one moment, it is still the basis for most of "Western" culture and language, blah dee blah, and all the things that people say the reasons it is good for you, it is STILL good for you.

It increases your vocubulary, and it increases your ability to understand new and unfamiliar words with latin roots. It hones your logical skills, and improves your grammar. And makes you better in bed, from having read all those naughty Suetonius accounts of the Caesars' decadance.

I don't regret studying all that Latin at school for a moment. I only wish we'd had the opportunity to study classical Greek and maybe Hebrew as well. The biggest regret of my life is that I didn't learn more languages while I was young and had a natural aptitude for them. I would love to be a polyglot.

masonic boom, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Still eagerly awaiting the S*nker magnum opus concerning the punxOrz. Or for that matter call and responxOrs and the LP disxOrs.

Tim, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Latin was never offered to us ST!NKY PR0L3S at our school. Clearly no use for coal-mining or ship-building. Shame they closed the coal mines & ship yards down then, no? Anyway, latin = CLASSIC for me because:

Derek jarman film - "Sebastiane"? All dialogue in latin? = k-exotic to this lamer.

roman grafitti scene in "Life of Brian" - " the people called the romans, they go to their houses" (or suchlike) = very funny

My dream prog rock gig - play enormously complex, fiddly pieces, and then do between-song announcements in latin - like "you though that was pretentious - cop this!!!

xoxo

Norman Fay, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I'll admit your point Kate that Latin is A Classic, in as much as it is taught as such. However I find it difficult to believe that many new words being added to the language now stem from Latin.

Except maybe cockfarmer.

Pete, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

"internet" - actually "net" may not be.

Tom, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Er I'm waiting till Michael G. Breece gets to thredz in question and reanimates em, Tim: ie abt half an hour, prob, sigh. Thinking abt PunXor sends me into a tailspin of total life re-evaluation, every time.

mark s, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Did two years Latin at school; cannot recall a word. Oh, uno... there's a word. Not as bad as French: did four years at school and cannot speak a word. That'd be acceptable had I failed, but no, passed every exam w/ ease. Tells you how poorly it was taught: emphasis on grammatics rather'n oral (and that's NZ's most exclusive school); annoys me now. Anyway, Latin, wish w/ hindsight I was fluent, if only for purposes of being a twat = very much enjoyed Tom and Mark's sparring on Urban legends thread.

AP, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

New techspeak words are NOTORIOUSLY derived from Latin and Greek. Erm.. where do you think prefixes like "tele-" and the like come from?

masonic boom, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Yes, but I know what a telephone, telecommunications etc. are from the use of my brain rather than the fact that I was taught a dead language 10 years ago.

I don't think it particularly improves your social skills if you like to inform people about the Latin roots of words over a quiet pint.

Emma, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I don't think it particularly improves your social skills if you like to inform people about the Latin roots of words over a quiet pint.

I will personally give props to anyone who can get their object of desire to take him/her home based sole on mad Latin skillz. You should get a special shrine in the Player's Hall of Fame for that.

Dan Perry, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

My year was the last to be offered Latin as a GCSE option so I did it because I was a boff. We were taught by a man who spoke Spanish and also Latin fluently, the freak, but not English, so we spent most of the time taking the piss out of him (boffs can be rebels too, y'know). We had a nice orange book about Caecilius who est in horto and a Coquus who vituperat at the dog. These two phrases have been filed in the dusty archives of my mind alongside 'wie komme ich am besten zum Bahnhof bitte?' and 'una cerveza por favor' although they do rank rather lower on the usefulness scale.

The only time I have ever used Latin since was when I was tested on a tricky irregular subjunctive in an Italian class and I brought forth the memory of a Latin root from seven years previously, guessed an ending and hey presto! I speak fluent Italian and French and that is the only instance my scant knowledge of Latin has helped me out, so that old chestnut about it giving you a greater understanding of modern languages just doesn't wash with me I'm afraid.

Madchen, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Would this be retroactive? Cos I mean presumably it was perfectly possible to talk someone into bed using Latin up until about 1500 AD.

(Not sure about now, and hey, I went to boarding school so I'd have seen it in action.)

Tom, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Grumio coquus est.

Tom, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Who spoke Latin in 1500 AD? Priests and monks? Asking people into bed? Ah, I understand.

Madchen, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Also lawyers, scribes (medieval David Lodge-esque action), The King etc.

Tom, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Perhaps I should amend that to say anyone who can get someone into bed by being super-impressive with dead-language skills (and ONLY dead language skills). Otherwise, the time machine rule has me giving out props to every lucky scrub in the Roman empire.

Dan Perry, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

"Television", notoriously and hilariously, esp.to pedants, is BY ITSELF derived from both latin (video, videre, visi, visum = to see) AND greek (tele = far). A grate solecism, still, in the 40s and 50s, which contributed to disdain in which telly was held and thus likely freed it from interference by critical mass of reactionary pinheads hurrah.

mark s, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

*tries to think of something funny to say about Vulgar Latin*

Madchen, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I will personally give props to anyone who can get their object of desire to take him/her home based sole on mad Latin skillz.

We-eeell, despite what I said about Latin being a swizz upthread, I have been unduly impressed by person-desiring-me-as-an-object's mad general etymological skillz in the past. Though I can't honestly claim that was the sole reason I went to bed with them later.

Richard Tunnicliffe, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

You can't win Dan's award by GETTING PULLED with language skillz, though, surely. I mean it's a bit easy (or you are).

Tom, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Other languages, skillz in which will not earn you Dan's award: High Elvish, Klingon

mark s, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I wasn't claiming it for myself, just pointing out that it might be more easily done than Dan might have thought. And I must emphasize that no Klingon or Elvish of any sort was involved. It did turn out later that she had invented an entire language of her own, but this didn't have anything to do with the initial pullage.

Richard Tunnicliffe, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

dudus in extremis

Geoff, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

We started a rumor in college that one of the guys in the Glee Club was fluent in Klingon. He didn't get a date until he went to grad school at Caltech. We were very proud of ourselves.

I didn't realize there were so many language tarts out there! Had I known, I'd've gone for that linguistics degree. ("Dude, when you go to school, study linguistics. You'll have to beat them off with a stick! [insert lame joke about beating someone off with a stick here]")

I always wanted to learn Latin because I'd heard that it helped your vocabulary. I didn't have the opportunity to study it until college, where many people warned me off of it because they way it was taught made the class IMPOSSIBLE TO PASS. (I knew a kid who had 7 years of Latin who took the second year course for an easy A and almost failed it. He regularly did his homework, too.)

There was another guy who enjoyed singing homoerotic poems that were written in Latin and ancient Greek, but that's a very silly and tangential story.

Dan Perry, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Sure gave me a leg up, as it was a major selling point when I applied to colleges. Besides, I got to go on road trips every year to do the state Latin contest. I've since studied other Romance languages, and I think Latin really helped with that, especially with Italian. It also helped me greatly in my art history and humanities classes. Plus, stupid rich WASPs don't study Latin, so it gave me something to feel superior about.

Kerry Keane, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

"Rident stolida verba Latina" ('only fools laugh at the Latin language')-some ancient dude whose name I've forgotten

Joe, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Well, hmm, I suppose aspects of Latin teaching at school are fairly dud (more or less dud than other subjects at school? Um, er, hmm. No. Yes. Maybe. Don't know. Don't ask me, I just trot out the fence- sitting platitudes), but learning semi-obscure languages and not quite knowing why, except that maybe it's something to do with etymology looking quite interesting from a layperson's perspective, is classic, and dead languages in which you don't have to go through the humiliation of doing oral exams or talking to foreigners or generally worrying about your accent being incomprehensible or hilarious are even more classic.

Learning Welsh would be cool, as would Estonian, and I've accumulated teach-yourself books on Polish, Icelandic and Norwegian from various charity shops. I should get back to learning Finnish, since I seem to have abandoned any intention of doing any university work before I go back (due to illness I'm currently in the middle of time out of a course I'm not very interested in, atrociously bad at and very behind on, and next year will be my final year like this year just finished should have been, so I have a lot of work I should be doing, but... bleh). I like to think that one day I'll go there and visit Stupido Records and Oskun Divari in Helsinki and buy loads of records by Circle and Karkkiautomaatti and Aavikko and YUP, then go up to Lapland, singing "Caribou" by the Pixies and that Monty Python "Finland" song all the way. Of course, I'll probably never learn Finnish and never go to Finland, and even if I do I'll be too embarrassed to say a word of Finnish and be immediately recognised as foreign and addressed in English anyway, and it's probably best not to visit the places you have an irrational daydreamy fondness for because they'll only be horribly disappointing, but hey.

[Am worryingly tempted to offer to buy that Latin Alice in Wonderland, if Tom still has it. Would obviously skipread first page, realise I couldn't translate any of it, and put it on my bookcase next to my Latin Asterix book, never to be read again, but hey. (At least Asterix in Latin has pretty pictures to gawp at and the occasional dead obvious and almost quoteable bit, e.g. lovelorn Obelix: 1. (gemitus altus) / 2. ...gemitus altior... / 3. *gemitus altissimus*, which I think every Latin teacher across the country should photocopy to base their lessons on comparatives and superlatives on. Then again, I thought Moleworth's gerund cartoons - as found here, follow the link in the left margin - would be an invaluable aid to learning about gerunds, but my Latin teacher merely seemed bemused by them when I brought in a photocopy.)]

rebecca, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I will now grudgingly admit to having a GCSE in Latin, a B no less. I have no idea why. It was never sold to us as being useful. We went to a private school and it's just what you did, OK? Well, all twelve of us. The thing is we were only ever taught how to read it, not how to write or speak, or even listen. And we spent our whole time learning amo amas amat, amamus amatis amant, not much vocab which would have been useful for learning other languages. Declining fourth order Latin verbs does not get you far in a German supermarket. And I can't actually remember much more than "Caecilius est pater" "canis est in via", from the first page of book one. But it looks poncy on my CV (hey, curriculum vitae. I have no idea what that means), so not a total waste of 5 years.

Graham, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I just remembered some other things I loved about Latin. Our Latin teacher was the best - easily the coolest nun in school. Once a year, we'd have toga parties, where we'd get to go to school at night, wearing togas and putting on Latin / Roman-related skits (a lot of cartoon-character bedsheets at *those* parties). All the art phag / geek kids were in Latin, so I made a lot of friends. And there's quite a lot to be said for studying an ancient people by reading their own writings - "Cicero actually said this!". Last year, when I visited Bath, I was able to make out the inscriptions on the curses on display - I think the whole thing was more exciting for me than for the people I was with, because I'd studied the Romans and read their literature.

Kerry Keane, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Latin was (a) the only hi-school level subject where I actually learnt anything & (b) yeah well that's fuckin plenty isn't it? I'm really glad my parents were so old-fashioned & square that they made me do that. Also like lots of other people've already said, it meant I got lots more of the jokes in Molesworth. Yo N0rman - best Latin references in the world of prog rock are on the otherwise pretty bad 2nd album by Sir Lord Baltimore -"There was a man who came to Manhattan/ Dressed in white Satin/ & he could speak Latin" (it's Jesus), also the whole of the song "Caesar MCXIV" (I know I did those numerals wrong, i can't remember 'em)

duane, Tuesday, 3 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Yes, Latin teachers rule! Brother Theodore (our instructor) was the coolest, always my favorite high school teacher.

The thing I miss most about Latin class is forming random, antiquated sentences like "Amant puellas agricolae" (They love the daughters of the farmer).

Does anyone else laugh their ass off at that scene in Life of Brian? "The Locative, sir, THE LOCATIVE!!!"

Joe, Wednesday, 4 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Rebecca - Going to Finland: Classic. Best holiday I've ever had. I didn't do my research on the record shops beforehand though so I ended up wandering round Helsinki blind and finding none of them (did find a shop with a vintage 70s Spiderman pinball though). You should go, it's really good - all the people are surly and miserable which is great because they never bother you.

Tom, Wednesday, 4 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

You know, I am glad that SOME people are starting to defend Latin and the loving of obscure and dead languages, because yesterday, I was most definitely beginning to feel this sort of inverted geek snobbery where *certain* forms of geekdom (Dr. Who worship, musical trainspottery) were embraced and encouraged while others were being sneered at.

I tried to learn Finnish and Irish Gaelic as well (Welsh confused me, too many consonants) but gave up, and decided that making up my own obscure dead language was far more interesting. I created a whole runic-derived alphabet for it, as well. And if I didn't want to hand in any papers at school because the nun teaching the class was a cunt, I'd write the paper, translate it into my own secret language, and hand it in.

Apparently it wasn't that difficult, because eventually my grandfather (OK, he was very clever) broke the runic code, and we started writing postcards back and forth in it.

masonic boom, Wednesday, 4 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Loving Latin for obscurity or aid to reading James Joyce = classic. Claiming knowledge of Latin helps with vocabulary and thus is grate to have = dud, because though true in theory, get lots of the lower-level benefits just by being a good English speaker (oh, look, tele + vision, oh, look, prefix 'inter'), and higher-level benefits mostly irrelevant unless you get deep into kind of pointless scholarly erudition actually involving Latinate words in high frequency. Or if you = philologist.

Josh, Wednesday, 4 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

As a man of the cloth, I was blessed with a classical education. I can confidently say that it is jealousy of the lower orders that makes them scoff at the Latin tongue.

Latin is great. Basically it's great because it's great to learn languages, and it's great to learn languages that you are never going to use in every day speech. It just broadens the mind, makes you able to think more, and stuff. Also, studying Latin means you get to read Julius Caesar's showoffy accounts of conquering people, which is always good for a laugh.

That said, Ancient Greek is wayyyy better than Latin. People are more impressed with you learning it, because, although it's no harder as a language, it's not in the script we use now. And the literature of the Ancient Greeks represents a far more impressive contribution to the cultural and intellectual capital of the world than that of the Romans.

The Dirty Vicar, Wednesday, 4 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I didn't actually answer the question.

Latin in general = Classic, if for no other reason than refusing to die.

The part of Latin I was taught = Dud.

Graham, Wednesday, 4 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

one month passes...
Definitely classic. I'll be starting my fifth year. I love it and so far it's completely, utterly useless. Learning an admittedly useless subject in school and having people think I'm smart for it is just delightful.

Lyra, Thursday, 16 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I did GCSE Latin but it's almost all gone now. A few years ago I bought myself a 'Teach Yourself Latin' book as part of my self-improvement kick, but I haven't started it yet.

Isn't there some evidence that it was only ever really a written language, and that in Roman times people actually spoke some folky Italian-Latin hybrid?

Nick, Sunday, 19 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

What evidence could there be?

This has actually bugged me before - when we did Chaucer at A-Level our English teacher played us a tape of the whole thing in a frightening voice somewhere to the left of The Wurzels which he alleged was a 'middle English accent' and how Chaucer would have read it. How could they possibly know? Or was the tape merely some way of usefully filling the time of a lunatic?

Tom, Sunday, 19 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Mr Skelly used to read Chaucer in some kind of Brummie accent (his own accent was a mild, Stevie.S type posh Liverpool accent of his own). This worked very well. You could tell he loved doing it. He made me love Chaucer too anyway, so mad props to Mr Skelly.

I don't think it's really out of the question that there could be documentary evidence of the language people spoke 2000 years ago, Tom. I mean, historians are clever, so I'm told.

Nick, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

The kind of evidence that could be sited for the Latin thing is the actually difficulty of speaking it in a colloquial fashion, and lack of any written recording of colloquial variation. All languages develop slang and shortcuts in usage, and most written/spoken languages will show that in the development of the written word. If LAtin does not do so it may be that Latin was purely a formalised written language which stuck rigidly to certain rules. The spoken language may well have been different.

Also where would Italian come from?

Pete, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Pompeii graffiti is good evidence here which from memory is actually written in something quite near latinised ILEspeak - loads of abbreviations and punctuation-work. Alea jax0r est.

Tom, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Also plays of Plautus: since they were the texts from which the ac-tors and strollin' playas worked, surely they did not require some haXoR-speak mental translation device, as to how it wuz said on-staghe diff from on paper (or skin or wax or stone or Kraftus cheese slices, or whatever they were written on).

Wot woz literacy rate? Did eg plebes and/or slave classes have diff languages (ans = yes, somewhat, surely)

Plays of Plautus make Latin skits in Molesworth look like Oscar Wilde btw

mark s, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

This page explains what I'd heard about Vulgar Latin vs. written Latin.

Nick, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

When they teach Latin they should teach useful phrases that you might use if you went on holiday to Lat, rather than all that "this is what it says in books written in Latin" rubbish.

Greg, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

one month passes...
Just a thought: Up until about 100 years ago most global scientific publications where still done in latin as a universal language - now replaced with english thank god, so could be kinda usefull at getting at original works without dodgy translation. Not that this is going to prompt me to learn latin...

Incidently this fact was brought to my attention by a chinese professor on a bus to Shanghai - he spoke excellent english because he has to publish all his work in it...

james launders, Friday, 28 September 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

three months pass...
Classic-i've got latin a lvl on my cv an ppl r wll impressd. im @ cambrdge so dats got 2 cnubt 4 smethin? luv d jkes1

Fliss, Saturday, 29 December 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I converted to Catholicism post vatican II so my church latin is limited to the Kyrie Eleison.

Anthony, you bongo, Kyrie Eleison is Greek.

DV, Saturday, 29 December 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

six years pass...

HAve just started taking a non-credit Latin class at the local CC for the summer. For Fun. Have pity on me.

Just the first block in trying to assemble my own classical education.

kingfish, Friday, 27 June 2008 23:10 (fifteen years ago) link

Good luck.

I did Latin at school for six years - the biggest benefit for me was that it vastly improved my grasp of English grammar and my base for learning other languages. But perhaps that is more a reflection of the way I was taught than the language itself.

For me though the main point of learning a language is 1) to communicate with more people in the world and 2) to be able to read more widely, and with Latin I didn't get either because no-one really speaks it and there are good and readily-available English translations available for pretty much anything I'd want to read in Latin.

Cathy, Friday, 27 June 2008 23:31 (fifteen years ago) link

FW has been translated a few times, but you know, it's not the same. There's a really great webpage you could google up that compares two translations of FW into Japanese.

I found that almost immediately with Latin I was coming across sentences that had effects that got demolished in translation. But I also generally don't find that a given text's "meaning" usually resides in its "meaning", but rather in its rhetorical choices etc. You don't, to give an obvious example, read Cicero for what he says, but how he says it -- that's almost entirely where the meaning lies. I have no clue why anyone would read Cicero in English.

No, I wouldn't think there are any untranslatable ideas, allowing enough time to explain nuance.

Casuistry, Saturday, 28 June 2008 18:19 (fifteen years ago) link

Also, things are much funnier in foreign languages, I find, in part because you're reading so slowly and are so hungry for a reward that you'll laugh at anything that's given you. (On the other hand, I often had to explain the puns and wordplay to my friends in our reading group when we were reading Isidore, so maybe I'm just good at that sort of thing. Hopefully I am. Otherwise grad school will be frustrating.

Casuistry, Saturday, 28 June 2008 18:21 (fifteen years ago) link

)

Casuistry, Saturday, 28 June 2008 18:22 (fifteen years ago) link

hungry for a snob

conrad, Saturday, 28 June 2008 18:30 (fifteen years ago) link

Well I studied it for eleven years, it fkn oughta be classic

Just got offed, Saturday, 28 June 2008 19:04 (fifteen years ago) link

Dude I did RE for umpteen years and I'm fucked if that was classic.

Noodle Vague, Saturday, 28 June 2008 19:09 (fifteen years ago) link

Hahaha! To be fair, for the last seven of those years it was purely out of choice! Definitely the best foreign language I've attempted to study, and the only one I did as part of my final degree.

My brother is considering Philosophy or Theology for uni but I think it's coz his RE teacher is fairly lax with the whole setting work thing...

Just got offed, Saturday, 28 June 2008 19:12 (fifteen years ago) link

Akshully I used to love doing RE mostly but it's still a load of old bollocks.

Noodle Vague, Saturday, 28 June 2008 19:12 (fifteen years ago) link

Rhetorical flourish and nuance in the language is what really makes a lot of this literature, and it's difficult to replicate perfectly ... of course, it's the same with -any- work in translation. Ancient Greek rhetoric is like ... building these amazing machines with just with language, it's weird.

My favorite example of lost nuance in translation is how philosophy has mangled the concept of 'eudaimon'. People go on about it meaning luck or fortune, but if you take apart the words it's eu - good and daimon - a minor supernatural being. It can sometimes mean something along the lines of being born with a good supernatural entity looking over you or something like that and has all sorts of underlying meaning lost when people just call it 'luck'.

A better translation would be "blessed", but for some reason philosophy translations totally miss that mark. Or at least the Ivy League blowhards who lecture on philosophy I've heard who never bothered to read the stuff in the original.

burt_stanton, Saturday, 28 June 2008 22:11 (fifteen years ago) link

Basically all ancient Greek philosophy in translation is completely wrong and any Western philosophy based on translated ancient Greek philosophy gets it wrong. But it doesn't mean it lacks value.

burt_stanton, Saturday, 28 June 2008 22:17 (fifteen years ago) link

raeda in fossa est!

clotpoll, Saturday, 28 June 2008 23:00 (fifteen years ago) link

ferte auxilium!

clotpoll, Saturday, 28 June 2008 23:00 (fifteen years ago) link

Unless you're a native speaker of a language, doesn't your reading a text in the original amount to a translation? And doesn't that imply everything that you find unsatisfactory in published translations too?

Noodle Vague, Saturday, 28 June 2008 23:11 (fifteen years ago) link

Well, no. I mean, no. It is something other than reading it as a native speaker, but when you read something in a foreign language, you don't go about translating it into your native language first. At least, you shouldn't. But even if you do, the ambivalence and the rhetoric of the original are still in your mind, not replaced by the translator's rhetoric.

People go on about it meaning luck or fortune, but if you take apart the words it's eu - good and daimon - a minor supernatural being.

Except, you know, that's not quite how words work. They start off getting formed that way, maybe, but compound words quickly take on a life of their own. I think this sense of Ancient Greek compound words really easily breaking down into their constituent parts is weirdly common and people say things like that all the time. But it's like saying "Oh well it's a blackboard which is a black board so it must be black, you're crazy for thinking you had a green one in your classroom" or "Oh it's rush hour so people are rushing and there's no way rush hour traffic could be at a standstill". I don't know the story behind eudaemonia but there's no immediate reason there why it couldn't have come to mean "luck or fortune" by 450BCE -- you'd have to look at contexts, not etymologies.

Casuistry, Sunday, 29 June 2008 19:31 (fifteen years ago) link

latin was hands down the most actively useful in quotidian life subject i studied in school (you know, once i'd learnt to read and write and so on) (i would add basic maths but it transpired the other day that i have actually ~forgotten my times tables~ wtf). just in terms of understanding unfamiliar words or phrases, getting by in other countries etc, plus my latin teacher turned out to be right in how it helped you think logically! i never believed him at the time. shoulda done it for A-level instead of maths, because all of that shit is gone from my brain now.

lex pretend, Sunday, 29 June 2008 20:17 (fifteen years ago) link

I think ancient Greek is very evocative in a way that doesn't come across in translation, there are little things about the language I really love. Like how the placement of articles can change the meaning of a phrase, it's so small and subtle and beautifully effective! And words that are translatable, but require a paragraph rather than a word or phrase to do justice to, so they pack more of a punch in the original. I haven't had that experience so much with Latin but if you love the language more than I do I can see how you might.

Also, Casuistry is in one respect quite OTM about the compound words, although I don't know about eudaimon in particular, or how much they changed in classical times...when I attempted to learn a little modern Greek, I got horribly confused by words that clearly had roots I knew in ancient Greek but mean totally different, if related, things now.

Maria, Sunday, 29 June 2008 21:01 (fifteen years ago) link

three years pass...

I have no idea what made me think of this but did any Americans who took Latin use the Ecce Romani books? I can still remember all the names of the characters. Gaius Cornelius! Flavia! Latin was my favorite class in HS for a while. I really enjoyed it but I like language classes in general so that's not too surprising.

Juggy Brottleteen (ENBB), Wednesday, 2 November 2011 14:39 (twelve years ago) link

oh god we used those

Nigel Farage is a fucking hero (nakhchivan), Wednesday, 2 November 2011 14:39 (twelve years ago) link

they were pretty good iirc

Nigel Farage is a fucking hero (nakhchivan), Wednesday, 2 November 2011 14:43 (twelve years ago) link

lol maybe they're the only Latin textbooks in the whole world!

Juggy Brottleteen (ENBB), Wednesday, 2 November 2011 14:44 (twelve years ago) link

our first latin teacher had a cane and dished out after school detentions if you smiled

our second latin teacher was a mr. p enis

Crackle Box, Wednesday, 2 November 2011 16:21 (twelve years ago) link

i would just like to register my distaste for the latin wikipedia and its unforgivably dorky (and inconsistent in wikipedia terms) latinizing of forenames

http://la.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephanus_Gerrard
http://la.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonillus_Messi
http://la.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marcellus_Proust

Nigel Farage is a fucking hero (nakhchivan), Wednesday, 2 November 2011 21:55 (twelve years ago) link

we used ecce romani too! marcus and cornelia and sextus!

lex pretend, Thursday, 3 November 2011 00:00 (twelve years ago) link

latin is easily the subject i studied at school that i use most regularly in quotidian life. easily!

lex pretend, Thursday, 3 November 2011 00:01 (twelve years ago) link

and i only did it up to gcse - so so so stupid of me to choose maths over it for a level on the basis that it'd be "more useful". i could not have been more wrong.

lex pretend, Thursday, 3 November 2011 00:02 (twelve years ago) link

^ You said that in 2008.

Josefa, Thursday, 3 November 2011 03:59 (twelve years ago) link

Yeah, Ecce Romani! Did they ever get out of the ditch?

JoeStork, Thursday, 3 November 2011 04:46 (twelve years ago) link

That entry on Messi is v short!

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 3 November 2011 05:43 (twelve years ago) link

^ You said that in 2008.

― Josefa, Thursday, November 3, 2011 3:59 AM (4 hours ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

haha latin did not teach me to read threads before posting obviously

all i see is angels in my eyes (lex pretend), Thursday, 3 November 2011 08:31 (twelve years ago) link

We used Cambridge Latin Course textbooks (I had to google the names of the people to figure that out - Caecilius, Metella, Grumio etc). I dropped it at 13, didn't want to do GCSE.

The Eyeball Of Hull (Colonel Poo), Thursday, 3 November 2011 08:51 (twelve years ago) link

i did not study it but acquired those later, i wondered how they ever got through any high school classroom without hours of ppl going "SEXtus? snort"

thomp, Thursday, 3 November 2011 09:16 (twelve years ago) link

gaius more like GAYus amirite

thomp, Thursday, 3 November 2011 09:17 (twelve years ago) link

if it was good enough for monty python...

ceci n'est pas un nom d'affichage (ledge), Thursday, 3 November 2011 11:40 (twelve years ago) link

seven years pass...

Day 1: Kennedy's Latin Primer. I've had this copy since I was a teenager and still teach with it today. Despite being published under Benjamin Kennedy's name, it was secretly written by his daughters, Marion and Julia. See Stray 1996 https://t.co/eon4yNYMdW pic.twitter.com/Z1mlw81ykh

— Dr Hannah Čulík-Baird (@opietasanimi) February 14, 2019

mark s, Friday, 15 February 2019 17:50 (five years ago) link

so the iconic Molesworth image of Kennedy hunting some grammar is a LIE

imago, Friday, 15 February 2019 17:53 (five years ago) link

the daughters wrote the revised primer of blessed memory but BHK had previously hunted down the grammar for an elementary primer

mark s, Friday, 15 February 2019 17:57 (five years ago) link

Kid's in her second year. She loves it. Old Greek not so much her thing.

nathom, Friday, 15 February 2019 18:15 (five years ago) link


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