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#1 2012-04-18 12:18:10

maxskywalker
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Registered: 2008-01-27
Posts: 1000+

Latin

(Going by the memory of imnotbob's learning romanji topic, I'm assuming that this fits here)

I'm teaching myself Latin.  I learned a bit of it in school a few years ago, and am currently trying to better my vocabulary and fix some grammar mistakes.  I've tried a few phrases, but the thing is that my only resource is Google Translate, which has its faults (namely, it doesn't read phrases, just words; for example 'do' means 'i give' and 'dare' means 'give', but when I type 'i give' it translates to 'i dare', because it doesn't recognize 'i' but recognizes 'give').  I was playing around with some phrases, and just want to check if they are correct or extremely awkward.  (And yes, I know that they're all based on the same sentence.)  My translations are below lines of latin in blue.

Sum esse umbra et lux
I am light and a shadow

Sum esse umbra Mordor et lux Gondor
I am the shadow of Mordor and the light of Gondor
(Mordor and Gondor might mean something, but I'm using them as proper nouns here; as in either the cities or countries in the Lord of the Rings)

Es umbra et sum lux.
You are a shadow and I the light

Are these (reasonably) correct, or is it basically just words that have roughly the same meaning?  I'm especially uncertain about my use of 'et'- I'm not sure whether it should be, for example, 'sum esse umbra et lux' or 'sum esse umbra et sum esse lux' or maybe 'sum esse umbra et esse lux'.  But I still think that I got all this right; when I try anything else in Google Translate, it's just nonsense (like 'I am a shadow, and he declared that to be the light').

So am I barely right or completely wrong?

Last edited by maxskywalker (2012-04-19 08:50:30)

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#2 2012-04-18 13:47:24

maxskywalker
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Registered: 2008-01-27
Posts: 1000+

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#3 2012-04-18 13:54:13

Alternatives
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Registered: 2010-09-16
Posts: 1000+

Re: Latin

Turris Nobilis


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Well if you wanted honesty, that's all you had to say. I never want to let you down or have you go, it's better off this way.

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#4 2012-04-18 16:35:28

maxskywalker
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Registered: 2008-01-27
Posts: 1000+

Re: Latin

Alternatives wrote:

Turris Nobilis

'the tower noble'?  'the tower is known'?  What?

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#5 2012-04-18 18:23:57

trinary
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Registered: 2012-01-29
Posts: 1000+

Re: Latin

I learn Latin online from the Cambridge Latin Course.
There are five books, and each book contains many chapters.
Each chapter introduces a new grammatical construction and new vocabulary.

If you are serious about learning Latin, I suggest you try completing the first book.
It took my class a year to, but online you learn rather a lot faster.


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