I read this book in latin, and I like this pronunciation, the reader is not english, his mather tongue is surely Spanish or italian, this is the reason why his accent is beautiful. Bravo.
totally. americans pronouncing latin is usually depressing haha my mother tongue is portuguese, by the way, which, after italian is the closes to latin, phonetically.
+CDEbFGAbB Not according to this page:www.njcl.org/pages/resources-caesar He's a professor and latinist, ''capable of reading, writing, and speaking the language as fluently as his native tongue''.
+Donny Burgon I didn't say that he knows no latin, but that it seems he doesn't understand what he reads. Why? Because he doesn't respect the marks of punctuation very much. I caught him sometime linking two sentences passing over a dot and reading as if they were the same sentence, and most of the times he doesn't know that he's reading a question until the last or penultimate word. And thefore the intonnation seems forced. To me he didn't rehearse this reading enough. In my opinion, also, italian pronuntiation can't be the authentic pronuntiation of latin. When an italian comes to you and starts speaking english one realizes since the first sentence that english is not his/her mother tongue. It happens the same with latin. How? according to how they pronounce most of the final consonants. I work in tourism and when someone unknown comes to me for the first time and starts speaking english pronouncing all the final consonants accompanied with an -ae s-he undoubtedly is italian. I, as a non italian, can pronounce words like amabuntur, quid, sunt, praesidiis, etc... without having to add an -ae to them. It sounds more natural. But well, languages can evolve naturally or arbitrarilly. Nevertheless, this guy has worked on it and in this video he pronounces much better the final consonants than he does in other videos. Just my (subjective?) opinion.
+CDEbFGAbB Agree with everything you said but at least this guy doesn't add the -ae at the end of a word. I like his up-and-down timbre, he's great at acting out the text, and I'd imagine his intonation is very close to that of the people who spoke it. He does seem to ignore punctuation at times, but that's not the reason I looked up this video. I wanted to hear some spoken latin lol. There's not many videos like that on the web. His seems, to me, the most natural out of all videos I've seen and heard.
+Donny Burgon My apologies. I had to edit my last message and new things came to my mind and possibly you missed what I said at the end: "Nevertheless, this guy has worked on it and in this video he pronounces much better the final consonants than he does in other videos." It seems that you and I are watching these vids for the same purpose. I also find them great to do the listening of this language. Good luck with your learning of latin. Glad to exchange opinions with you. ;)
Na minha língua, muitas palavras do latim subsistem ainda entre nós com o mesmo sentido, por exemplo a palavra horror, a gravamos e pronunciamos da mesma maneira que os velhos romanos, parabéns ao orador, que transmite a força e a indignação do Pilar de Ferro, tantos Séculos depois.
I very like this video and especially the Ecclesiastical Latin pronunciation. If you don't mind, I would like to ask your permission to share this video on the other website in China for the embarrassing reason that UA-cam is blocked from accessing in China. Of course, I will give sources of the original website. Gratiam habe!
Did you record these straight to mp3? Or did you record them first and then _convert_ to mp3? If you converted, then you can do it again at a higher bitrate and everything will be fine! I could explain how to do that if you are unsure. I bought an old video of Cicero orations many years ago and was really pleased to see these. I wanted to listen to them in the car going to work, but it's impossible. If you look at the views you get. You get a lot for part one and very little for subsequent parts. That tells you that someone has tried to listen to part one then given up.
Great energy. Great reading of this famous text. The only problem, Cicero did not speak Italian; it did not exist. The v, he pronounced as u, not the v in Italian and other romance languages; the c was not pronounced with the Italian pronunciation; Cicero pronounced it as k. The g was not like in giorno (ital.), but like in ghe (ital.). This contamination is to be avoided among those who want to be faithful to the classics. This parenthesis made, great reading, great eloquence!
Magister, sua non Ciceronis ratione pronuntiandi recitare voluit, ut suspicor. Praetera, quis posset, praeter hos quorum mentionem fecisti sonos, pro certo habere qua dictione, quibus modis Romani tempore Caesaris locuti sint? Mihi ratio quae vocatur restituta satis probanda atque utilis videtur; verumtamen traditionem, qua latinitas nobis tradita est, attente respiciendam censeo; Ergo, ut paucis constringam, sua quisque pronuntietur ratione, dummodo inter nos bene intellegere possimus, modis sane servatis. Bene valeas!
he might have made more mistakes than lots of English profs would've made but his sounds more real just because the English accent sounds so strange and snobbish
Finally someone who reads properly... Americans pronouncing latin gives me depression, they manage to make a beautiful language into a barbaric-sounding babble mess.
@@Fry09294 Ah yes, indeed, the 1500 """scientifically""" ""reconstructed"" pronounciation by anglo-german (who, just like today, could not pronounce the beautiful and heavenly flowings of the Italian/Latin language) is certainly more accurate than the pronounciation with AT LEAST 1800 years of actual history behind it
@@RashFever26 There are many Roman grammarians and rhetoricians who directly attest Classical Latin pronunciation. Quintillian, whose grammars continued to serve as models for Latin instruction into the renaissance tells us “Nam K quidem in nūllīs verbīs ūtendum putō... cum sit C littera, quae ad omnēs vōcālēs vim suam praeferat”, i.e. “Indeed, I feel the letter K is not to be used in any words when the letter C exists, which retains its strength across all vowels.” Adding to this, Sardinian, one of Latin’s direct descendants NEVER palatalizes hard /k/ into soft /tʃ/ like Italian and a number of other Romance languages do. If you want to deny all this concrete evidence of how Classical Latin was pronounced, be my guest.
I kept these lex-anagrams over the years in my copy of CICERO by Anthony Everitt: ISBN 0-375-50746-9 & IMPERIUM, by Robert Harris; ISBN-13: 978-0-7432-6603-1. For ALBERT "BOOKER", the Antique Book Lover&Reader:This Favorite Book of THE GREAT GATSBY(Both Movies -Robert Redford& Leonardo DiCaprio!): The Catilinarian Conspiracy in Its Context,by E.G. Hardy, Oxford Press,1924: A Genuine Classic from Th'Roaring Twenties, a true Supplementary Complement or Complementary Supplement to "THE RED NAPOLEON
I remember Marley's Ghost in "A Christmas Carol" by Charles Dickens! Will Catiline be like Marley? Or will it be the haunting spirit of ALBERT EINSTEIN? (remember they got his eyes & his Brain in post mortem examination! Mr. Spock was a lot luckier in "SPOCK'S BRAIN"! It better not be Daddy's Ghost via "The Pascagoula Incident"! Daddy may haunt Fort Steuben Cemetary but not IC Elementary School!! Zak, Nik, Aaron, I Need you're Help! Maybe They'll need Harry Potter's Latin incantations!
He remembers a Girl in the Class whose Book Report Presentation was "Love Story": "Love Means You never have to sat you're sorry! It was a popular Movie at the Time starring Ryan O'Neil. #2898) To OWL It's The Senate's Kuria Room by His (imagination&pretended oratorical-book report Presentation to the Class in the 1972-73 School Year at Buchanan Junior High. #2899) It's on a Top Floor, third, Left Side, by Al K.'s Use: His Vim! "HH"'ng - "U.G.U."Hue e.g. "e" Fun. [Shado"e"?]
Catilina: "I, Al(Owl), Act In!" [Thespian Motto: "Act Well Your Part, There All the Honor Lies!] [ all the Earth's A Stage.& all are Players on it &..each Man plays 7 Parts..They have their Exits & their Entrances.-Shakespeare] #2897) G! Here is Dod's Kuria of Imagination by Englesh! U: Tu Potes! Tu Ullus! ( In Grade 8 at Buchanan Junior High, in Dodd's English Lit, Albert gave a Book Report on "A PILLAR of IRON" by Taylor Caldwell: He mimicked both Cicero & Catiline in His Presentation, 1972-73
The Famous "High" Romans: 1) MARCUS TULLIUS CICERO; 2) LUCIUS SERGIUS CATILINA #2905) Al is "SISERO" in the Senate: He Fights Him...Th' Bloody End! UGU of U: "Puk U, Flug'r!" #2906) OWL does His KATILINE Orations! "P" Theme: Huge Destiny! HH-GG: Bluff, Rufus! (Rufus Vestito circa 1998-1999's Varsity Blues?) #2907) Al is Katiline Himself Too! : He D'fends His Own...tp Peers. Th' Ruby: Hug U- "GG" U! (Gridiron Glory? Gentleman's Grooming? Goten Gold? General's Genius? God's Glory?...)
#2903) OWL does His Eighth Grade Presentation of Them II ( II: Roman Numerals for "Two") by Full Fun ( just like Jeffry Hatcher's Soloquy of Shakespeare's HAMLET in Miss Judy Fortunato's Grade 6 Class at what was once Stark Elementary in 1969-1970) U "H.K." Guys! (Plato's Guardians for Alby? Not to be confused with the character named Plato in the 50's Film REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE! "H.K." could denote the H.K. of any Ellipse in a standard Math Course which Astronauts used in Lunar Landings....
So HERE IT IS! #2570) U Read Cicero. Meet STAS, then Aid. Y(Why) "AF"T? #2571) U Hear Cicero: "I State My---------A Need! Ft'd "T"! (You hear the real-genuine Marcus Tullius Cicero in the actual oratorical delivery from centuries ago: "Psi"wise, out of the Environment's Akasha Records(somewhat analogous to "Ghost Adventures: Zack Baggins, Nick Groff, Aaron Goodwin, but not in ghostly Negativity! #2572) DICO HAEC UT RES AD"SIT"(as I "SIT" here typing this all in!) Y a "TNT"? Fer Me-Ea! "I say
Rmembr: Albert Einstein's Picture Hung in the former Class Room of Mrs. Dodds when last frequented in the late 90's & early next decade starting '00! #2916) I Walk up Th'Stairs to Room Two Eleven! I See His (Albert Einstein's)---by----! G. Led Sign 'n' FFF, D.G. {Room 211, second floor, of "once" Buchanan Junior High [Neil Buchanan of "Varsity Blues" strikes a resonantly concordant Note!] #2917) I See His Pikture on th' DoorWay Wall: I "Hel'o!" Him. Sun'd FFF-GGG: "Best" Sent! (Aug-Sept 13-18)
"Menesec" seems to Rhyme with "Malesick" : Kevin Malesick... #2900) Ol' Mrs. Dod(d)'s "Eighth Year" Klass: Th'Sign of Th'Big Evil: "Foe U" up it "n' Few Hune. #2901) Al does His Book report in It! Due Us: "Mighty U.S. Falls en it! [ eg: the recent Hollywood Film "Olympus Has Fallen" ?] FF e.g. Gun We. #2902) The Book is "A Pillar Of Iron": It's Theme: High "Fused" Ev'l en Us! Hufty Gun'd Guts! #2903) His Presentation of Two "High" Romans...Th' U.S. is Fully Defiled! Uh, G! Beef Gu'k!
#2913) Hik Senatus In Templo Iovis Statoris:"Lege LEGENDO!" FFF: "Hug Ruby" HHH! [Is King LEGENDO(Randy Steiger's Son?) involved here? What of "TOM RUBY" of Dayton or elsewhere or elsewho? #2014) His "Senit" Kuria is en Stator's temple! FF U nigh U, Led by GOLD! Go U of U : HHH. (GOLD: Aurum Solis; Sky Gold; Confederate Gold: MY SECRET!] #2915) Odd Off U: U See ALBERT EINSTEIN's Picture on th'Wall! So U "g".Him! [Hello!, Albert Einstein! He'll be like Casper the friendly Ghost! F's gigy HHH!
SALVETTE AND STUFF. Now, to kick off this comment, personally this pronunciation doesn't really suit my tastes. One of the Opening slides states this pronunciation was used from 300 onwards but in my opinion Rome arguably started falling around 37 (I mean, did ya'll see Nero? Boi. Please) And, ahem, but a lot can change in a language over 300 years. SO IN CONCLUSION, sorry Mr. Vallejo but i think your Latin's a tad bit vulgar. and zum lesen 720p HD Vollbild anklicken :)))
hohoho, after nero there was a period as long as the reign of 5 succesive emperors which was a good and stable time btw this pronunciation should be prefered over any English pronunciation :)
C K he maybe using a later Latin pronunciation than that which was in vogue during Cicero‘s time, but, you have to give him props for bringing the reading to life. I have heard others speaking Latin using a reconstructed classical pronunciation where they overdo the length of the vowels and they nasalize and they do all sorts of stuff which is supposed to be spot on and they get all kinds of plaudits from scholars. But, the language does not come across as very natural. It sounds unlikely that people really spoke that way. This person, on the other hand, sounds fluid, natural and lively. It brings the reading to life. You absolutely can imagine that this language was spoken every single day by people from all walks of life when he speaks it. Lastly, say what you will about the ecclesiastical pronunciation of Latin but, one thing is for sure, this pronunciation was handed down to us directly by people who spoke this way every day of their lives. It is not reconstructed or contrived. It is a frozen moment in linguistic time.
I read this book in latin, and I like this pronunciation, the reader is not english, his mather tongue is surely Spanish or italian, this is the reason why his accent is beautiful. Bravo.
totally. americans pronouncing latin is usually depressing haha
my mother tongue is portuguese, by the way, which, after italian is the closes to latin, phonetically.
@@fabricio_santana No Sir, the closest ones, phonetically, are Sardinian, Italian and Spanish, 8%, 12 and 20% far from latin, respectively...
I don`t think so. To my opinion, his pronunсiation is very soft. That`s why his mather tongue may be German or English.
@@user-jf6qk6kk2w he is spanish
Except this pronunciation is not what Cicero would've done in his speech. It's post 3rd century more vulgar Latin than Classical.
the best intonation and accent I've heard thus far
+Donny Burgon To me it seems he doesn't understand what he reads, but that might be my perception.
+CDEbFGAbB Not according to this page:www.njcl.org/pages/resources-caesar
He's a professor and latinist, ''capable of reading, writing, and speaking the language as fluently as his native tongue''.
+Donny Burgon I didn't say that he knows no latin, but that it seems he
doesn't understand what he reads. Why? Because he doesn't respect the
marks of punctuation very much.
I caught him sometime linking two sentences passing over a dot and reading as if they were the same sentence, and most of the times he doesn't know that he's reading a question until the last or penultimate word. And thefore the intonnation seems forced.
To me he didn't rehearse this reading enough.
In my opinion, also, italian pronuntiation can't be the authentic pronuntiation of latin. When an italian comes to you and starts speaking english one realizes since the first sentence that english is not his/her mother tongue. It happens the same with latin. How? according to how they pronounce most of the final consonants.
I work in tourism and when someone unknown comes to me for the first time and starts speaking english pronouncing all the final consonants accompanied with an -ae s-he undoubtedly is italian.
I, as a non italian, can pronounce words like amabuntur, quid, sunt, praesidiis, etc... without having to add an -ae to them. It sounds more natural.
But well, languages can evolve naturally or arbitrarilly.
Nevertheless, this guy has worked on it and in this video he pronounces much better the final consonants than he does in other videos.
Just my (subjective?) opinion.
+CDEbFGAbB Agree with everything you said but at least this guy doesn't add the -ae at the end of a word. I like his up-and-down timbre, he's great at acting out the text, and I'd imagine his intonation is very close to that of the people who spoke it. He does seem to ignore punctuation at times, but that's not the reason I looked up this video. I wanted to hear some spoken latin lol. There's not many videos like that on the web. His seems, to me, the most natural out of all videos I've seen and heard.
+Donny Burgon My apologies. I had to edit my last message and new things
came to my mind and possibly you missed what I said at the end: "Nevertheless, this guy has worked on it and in this video he pronounces much better the final consonants than he does in other videos."
It seems that you and I are watching these vids for the same purpose. I
also find them great to do the listening of this language. Good luck
with your learning of latin. Glad to exchange opinions with you. ;)
This is one of the few times I've heard spoken latin where I can legitimately picture people speaking like this on a day to day basis. Thank you
This is not classical latin though but ecclesiastical
Excelente ejecución. Bastante emoción. Deveras hace vivir el idioma. Felicidades. Muchísimas gracias por subirlo.Vale, o Latini magister!
QVAM MAXIMA PASSIONE HABET HÍC VÍR IN NARRATIONÉ SVÁ. OPTIMÉ.
What an elegant language!
El primer párrafo es simplemente un poema.
MAGNIFICENT! NE PLUS ULTRA!
Na minha língua, muitas palavras do latim subsistem ainda entre nós com o mesmo sentido, por exemplo a palavra horror, a gravamos e pronunciamos da mesma maneira que os velhos romanos, parabéns ao orador, que transmite a força e a indignação do Pilar de Ferro, tantos Séculos depois.
I very like this video and especially the Ecclesiastical Latin pronunciation. If you don't mind, I would like to ask your permission to share this video on the other website in China for the embarrassing reason that UA-cam is blocked from accessing in China. Of course, I will give sources of the original website. Gratiam habe!
this is a great rendition imo, great example of the ecclestian dialect, perhaps how it would have sounded 1500 years ago.
Perfect! Hi from Kyiv!
The Italian pronunciation of latin is great!
Yes, thank you. This is good.
Great!
Did you record these straight to mp3? Or did you record them first and then _convert_ to mp3? If you converted, then you can do it again at a higher bitrate and everything will be fine! I could explain how to do that if you are unsure.
I bought an old video of Cicero orations many years ago and was really pleased to see these. I wanted to listen to them in the car going to work, but it's impossible. If you look at the views you get. You get a lot for part one and very little for subsequent parts. That tells you that someone has tried to listen to part one then given up.
0:21
cui bono ?
Cicerón: Catilinarias. Texto bilingüe Latín- español. Editorial Losada.Argentina 2006.
Great energy. Great reading of this famous text. The only problem, Cicero did not speak Italian; it did not exist. The v, he pronounced as u, not the v in Italian and other romance languages; the c was not pronounced with the Italian pronunciation; Cicero pronounced it as k. The g was not like in giorno (ital.), but like in ghe (ital.). This contamination is to be avoided among those who want to be faithful to the classics. This parenthesis made, great reading, great eloquence!
Magister, sua non Ciceronis ratione pronuntiandi recitare voluit, ut suspicor. Praetera, quis posset, praeter hos quorum mentionem fecisti sonos, pro certo habere qua dictione, quibus modis Romani tempore Caesaris locuti sint? Mihi ratio quae vocatur restituta satis probanda atque utilis videtur; verumtamen traditionem, qua latinitas nobis tradita est, attente respiciendam censeo; Ergo, ut paucis constringam, sua quisque pronuntietur ratione, dummodo inter nos bene intellegere possimus, modis sane servatis. Bene valeas!
The current Italian pronunciation of Latin is actually Ecclesiastical Latin
No one knows classical pronunciation. We know a third option, the restored, an hypothetical pronunciation. So why state it? ;)
Have we recordings of Cicero’s pronunciation? I didn’t think so.
he might have made more mistakes than lots of English profs would've made but his sounds more real just because the English accent sounds so strange and snobbish
Finally someone who reads properly... Americans pronouncing latin gives me depression, they manage to make a beautiful language into a barbaric-sounding babble mess.
God forbid Americans embrace Latin
Literally obsessed. No one in ancient Rome used ecclesiastical pronunciation, rather the barbaric-sounding babble mess you so eloquently described.
@@Fry09294 Ah yes, indeed, the 1500 """scientifically""" ""reconstructed"" pronounciation by anglo-german (who, just like today, could not pronounce the beautiful and heavenly flowings of the Italian/Latin language) is certainly more accurate than the pronounciation with AT LEAST 1800 years of actual history behind it
@@RashFever26 There are many Roman grammarians and rhetoricians who directly attest Classical Latin pronunciation. Quintillian, whose grammars continued to serve as models for Latin instruction into the renaissance tells us “Nam K quidem in nūllīs verbīs ūtendum putō... cum sit C littera, quae ad omnēs vōcālēs vim suam praeferat”, i.e. “Indeed, I feel the letter K is not to be used in any words when the letter C exists, which retains its strength across all vowels.” Adding to this, Sardinian, one of Latin’s direct descendants NEVER palatalizes hard /k/ into soft /tʃ/ like Italian and a number of other Romance languages do. If you want to deny all this concrete evidence of how Classical Latin was pronounced, be my guest.
10:40
10:06 bis 10:56
Great. Thanks! :-)
I kept these lex-anagrams over the years in my copy of CICERO by Anthony Everitt: ISBN 0-375-50746-9 &
IMPERIUM, by Robert Harris; ISBN-13: 978-0-7432-6603-1.
For ALBERT "BOOKER", the Antique Book Lover&Reader:This Favorite Book of THE GREAT GATSBY(Both Movies -Robert Redford& Leonardo DiCaprio!):
The Catilinarian Conspiracy in Its Context,by E.G. Hardy, Oxford Press,1924: A Genuine Classic from Th'Roaring Twenties, a true Supplementary Complement or Complementary Supplement to "THE RED NAPOLEON
I remember Marley's Ghost in "A Christmas Carol" by Charles Dickens! Will Catiline be like Marley? Or will it be the haunting spirit of ALBERT EINSTEIN? (remember they got his eyes & his Brain in post mortem examination! Mr. Spock was a lot luckier in "SPOCK'S BRAIN"! It better not be Daddy's Ghost via "The Pascagoula Incident"! Daddy may haunt Fort Steuben Cemetary but not IC Elementary School!! Zak, Nik, Aaron, I Need you're Help! Maybe They'll need Harry Potter's Latin incantations!
He remembers a Girl in the Class whose Book Report Presentation was "Love Story": "Love Means You never have to sat you're sorry! It was a popular Movie at the Time starring Ryan O'Neil.
#2898) To OWL It's The Senate's Kuria Room by His (imagination&pretended oratorical-book report Presentation to the Class in the 1972-73 School Year at Buchanan Junior High.
#2899) It's on a Top Floor, third, Left Side, by Al K.'s Use: His Vim! "HH"'ng - "U.G.U."Hue e.g. "e" Fun. [Shado"e"?]
Catilina: "I, Al(Owl), Act In!" [Thespian Motto: "Act Well Your Part, There All the Honor Lies!] [ all the Earth's A Stage.& all are Players on it &..each Man plays 7 Parts..They have their Exits & their Entrances.-Shakespeare]
#2897) G! Here is Dod's Kuria of Imagination by Englesh! U: Tu Potes! Tu Ullus! ( In Grade 8 at Buchanan Junior High, in Dodd's English Lit, Albert gave a Book Report on "A PILLAR of IRON" by Taylor Caldwell: He mimicked both Cicero & Catiline in His Presentation, 1972-73
2:03 pm CST
Dec. 29, 2023
Co-President Charity Colleen "Lovejoy" Crouse
The Famous "High" Romans: 1) MARCUS TULLIUS CICERO; 2) LUCIUS SERGIUS CATILINA
#2905) Al is "SISERO" in the Senate: He Fights Him...Th' Bloody End! UGU of U: "Puk U, Flug'r!"
#2906) OWL does His KATILINE Orations! "P" Theme: Huge Destiny! HH-GG: Bluff, Rufus! (Rufus Vestito circa 1998-1999's Varsity Blues?)
#2907) Al is Katiline Himself Too! : He D'fends His Own...tp Peers. Th' Ruby: Hug U- "GG" U! (Gridiron Glory? Gentleman's Grooming? Goten Gold? General's Genius? God's Glory?...)
16:50
A la italiana con la c + i....pero, una maravilla. Se le entiende
#2903) OWL does His Eighth Grade Presentation of Them II ( II: Roman Numerals for "Two") by Full Fun ( just like Jeffry Hatcher's Soloquy of Shakespeare's HAMLET in Miss Judy Fortunato's Grade 6 Class at what was once Stark Elementary in 1969-1970) U "H.K." Guys! (Plato's Guardians for Alby? Not to be confused with the character named Plato in the 50's Film REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE! "H.K." could denote the H.K. of any Ellipse in a standard Math Course which Astronauts used in Lunar Landings....
So HERE IT IS!
#2570) U Read Cicero. Meet STAS, then Aid. Y(Why) "AF"T?
#2571) U Hear Cicero: "I State My---------A Need! Ft'd "T"! (You hear the real-genuine Marcus Tullius Cicero in the actual oratorical delivery from centuries ago: "Psi"wise, out of the Environment's Akasha Records(somewhat analogous to "Ghost Adventures: Zack Baggins, Nick Groff, Aaron Goodwin, but not in ghostly Negativity!
#2572) DICO HAEC UT RES AD"SIT"(as I "SIT" here typing this all in!) Y a "TNT"? Fer Me-Ea! "I say
Haha so nice! It sounds like italian though. When i was in antique times it didn't sound like this :D
Aurum aurorum
Esto está leído en latín eclesiástico.
Rmembr: Albert Einstein's Picture Hung in the former Class Room of Mrs. Dodds when last frequented in the late 90's & early next decade starting '00!
#2916) I Walk up Th'Stairs to Room Two Eleven! I See His (Albert Einstein's)---by----! G. Led Sign 'n' FFF, D.G. {Room 211, second floor, of "once" Buchanan Junior High [Neil Buchanan of "Varsity Blues" strikes a resonantly concordant Note!]
#2917) I See His Pikture on th' DoorWay Wall: I "Hel'o!" Him. Sun'd FFF-GGG: "Best" Sent! (Aug-Sept 13-18)
"Menesec" seems to Rhyme with "Malesick" : Kevin Malesick...
#2900) Ol' Mrs. Dod(d)'s "Eighth Year" Klass: Th'Sign of Th'Big Evil: "Foe U" up it "n' Few Hune.
#2901) Al does His Book report in It! Due Us: "Mighty U.S. Falls en it! [ eg: the recent Hollywood Film "Olympus Has Fallen" ?] FF e.g. Gun We.
#2902) The Book is "A Pillar Of Iron": It's Theme: High "Fused" Ev'l en Us! Hufty Gun'd Guts!
#2903) His Presentation of Two "High" Romans...Th' U.S. is Fully Defiled! Uh, G! Beef Gu'k!
#2913) Hik Senatus In Templo Iovis Statoris:"Lege LEGENDO!" FFF: "Hug Ruby" HHH! [Is King LEGENDO(Randy Steiger's Son?) involved here? What of "TOM RUBY" of Dayton or elsewhere or elsewho?
#2014) His "Senit" Kuria is en Stator's temple! FF U nigh U, Led by GOLD! Go U of U : HHH. (GOLD: Aurum Solis; Sky Gold; Confederate Gold: MY SECRET!]
#2915) Odd Off U: U See ALBERT EINSTEIN's Picture on th'Wall! So U "g".Him! [Hello!, Albert Einstein! He'll be like Casper the friendly Ghost!
F's gigy HHH!
Read it to Trump. Tonight
it's vulgar Latin. :o
SALVETTE AND STUFF. Now, to kick off this comment, personally this pronunciation doesn't really suit my tastes. One of the Opening slides states this pronunciation was used from 300 onwards but in my opinion Rome arguably started falling around 37 (I mean, did ya'll see Nero? Boi. Please) And, ahem, but a lot can change in a language over 300 years. SO IN CONCLUSION, sorry Mr. Vallejo but i think your Latin's a tad bit vulgar. and zum lesen 720p HD Vollbild anklicken :)))
hohoho, after nero there was a period as long as the reign of 5 succesive emperors which was a good and stable time
btw this pronunciation should be prefered over any English pronunciation :)
C K he maybe using a later Latin pronunciation than that which was in vogue during Cicero‘s time, but, you have to give him props for bringing the reading to life. I have heard others speaking Latin using a reconstructed classical pronunciation where they overdo the length of the vowels and they nasalize and they do all sorts of stuff which is supposed to be spot on and they get all kinds of plaudits from scholars. But, the language does not come across as very natural. It sounds unlikely that people really spoke that way. This person, on the other hand, sounds fluid, natural and lively. It brings the reading to life. You absolutely can imagine that this language was spoken every single day by people from all walks of life when he speaks it. Lastly, say what you will about the ecclesiastical pronunciation of Latin but, one thing is for sure, this pronunciation was handed down to us directly by people who spoke this way every day of their lives. It is not reconstructed or contrived. It is a frozen moment in linguistic time.
0:22
0:21