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  Re: De Christi natu duae ex orationibus hodiernis         


Author: nihilnominis
Date: Dec 25, 2008 10:46

On Dec 25, 8:02 am, Johannes Patruus wrote:
> http://tinyurl.com/8m8sr3&  http://tinyurl.com/8ong6j
>
> Utramvis fac eligas!
>
> Patruus

Puer nobis nascitur,
Rector angelorum.
In hoc mundo pascitur,
Dominus Dominorum.

In præsepe ponitur
Sub fœno asinorum.
Cognoverunt dominum
Christum regem cœlorum.

Hinc Herodes timuit -
Magno cum dolore,
Et pueros occidit,
Infantes cum livore.
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  44 http://www.tjxzs.com.cn/ 48         


Author: tjxzs.com.cn
Date: Dec 24, 2008 23:11

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  Re: Aristotle on Politics         


Author: nihilnominis
Date: Dec 24, 2008 21:57

On Nov 9, 5:04 pm, "ozandy" myprovider.com> wrote:
> "Ed Cryer" ha scritto nel messaggionews:gf6tnc$uc4$1@aioe.org...
>
> [snipped long previous posts]
>
>
>
>> Very interesting, Andy. What strikes me is that Aristotle's view is a
>> million miles away from the politics that came out of the Enlightenment.
>> "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal
>> and are endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights....."
>
> What this discussion shows is that these truths are anything but
> self-evident. In fact for most of history, the opposite was "self-evident".
> Which to me is good evidence for these hidden structures of knowledge
> ("epistemes") which make us blind to certain ideas and treat others as
> "self-evident". It would be interesting to trace the ancestry of the ideas
> in the Declaration of Independence back to their sources to see how they
> arose.
> ...
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  Translation request         


Author: Karl Spencer
Date: Dec 24, 2008 19:59

With great power comes great responsibility

I'm not worried about it being precise so much as recognizable to
English speakers
1 Comment
  Re: Loeb vs. Hamilton (or, parallel vs. interlinear)         


Author: Klaus Scholl
Date: Dec 24, 2008 16:15

Johannes Patruus schrieb:

I've got a copy of "Caesar's Gallic War" of the series "Classic
Interlinear Translation"
printed by David McKay Company Inc. New York. No author is given. Was
the author
too ashamed of publishing a "crutch" to sign with his name? I wonder.

Anyway, this excerpt is laconic enough to deserve a spotlight:
> What is withheld is the information on the meaning of words, phrases and sentences the students are reading. Students are expected to parse for these for themselves, as a kind of perennial homework, after they have memorized grammatical rules and vocabulary lists. So students persevere, doing the translating and the explaining in the classroom, and it is the teacher who listens -- a complete role reversal.

Regards, Klaus
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  Idiotae coniventes         


Author: Ed Cryer
Date: Sep 22, 2008 09:38

"What's here? The portrait of a blinking idiot"
(Shakespeare; Merchant of Venice)

“What is love? What is creation? What is longing? What is a star?” thus
asks the last man, and he blinks.
The earth has become small, and on it hops the last man, who makes
everything small. His race is as ineradicable as the flea-beetle; the
last man lives longest.

“We have invented happiness,” say the last men, and they blink….".
(Nietzsche)

haec ipsa concedo: quibusdam etiam in rebus coniveo

qui ob eam causam in tot tantisque sceleribus conivebant

pro di immortales! cur interdum in hominum sceleribus maxumis aut
conivetis aut ... poenas in diem reservetis?
(Cicero, all)

Ed
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  Gaffiot         


Author: Caligula
Date: Sep 20, 2008 20:36

Salvete omnes forumenses,

In France we have a monumental, enormous and scholarly dictionary only
Latin/French, with the Latin vocabulary from Plautus untill at the first
centuries of the middle age. It is the famous Gaffiot, written by Félix
Gaffiot, first published in 1934, updated in 2007.

This dictionary was (and is) the best friend of many generations of
students and latinists.

I intend to go to London in a future week end, with Eurostar, and to buy a
dictionary equivalent Latin/English. What, please, is the name of the
English Gaffiot?

--
Caligula
Pontifex Maximus, Imperator, Pater Patriae.
9 Comments
  Steam radio Latin         


Author: Johannes Patruus
Date: Sep 19, 2008 00:56

To mark the European Day of Languages on 26th September:
http://www.cilt.org.uk/edl/
the Berlin radio station Kiss FM (http://www.kissfm.de/) will reportedly
broadcast its morning show entirely in Latin:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080918/od_nm/latin_dc

Patruus
1 Comment
  Carpe diem         


Author: Ed Cryer
Date: Sep 18, 2008 13:47

Saepe fluunt imo sic quoque lapsa sinu.
Non est, crede mihi, sapientis dicere 'Vivam':
Sera nimis vita est crastina: vive hodie.

Martial
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  Nomen carminis (Name that tune)         


Author: Ed Cryer
Date: Sep 18, 2008 13:45

1. Cantant equitum Romanorum chori.

2. Nec cornu nec caudam habent.

3. In horto Anglico sedens dum veniat sol.

4. Machinam in motum pone; ad stratam dirige.

5. Homo mille vocibus se tranquillissimum tenens.
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