Definitivamente, la lingua latina mai aveva la pronuncia italiana. Impossibile che i romani pronunciano tutte queste consonanti finale in tante parole accompagnati con questa -ae que solamente i italiani fanno. Parlo del presentatore. È solamente la mia opinione.
Francois Miville No, the Romans didn't speak Etruscan, although there were lots of Etruscan speakers around in early republican times. As to early Italian, Vulgar Latin gradually evolved into the several Italian dialects, but in the first centuries BC and CE that vulgar Latin was by and large the 'official' Latin that has become the written standard from Cicero's time onward. The upper classes liked to speak and read Greek, besides their native Latin.
amazed by how much I understand
Ego quoque!
maxime placet! Terentius vir disertissimus sermonisque Latini peritissimus!
Adiuvate me quaeso. Non intellego id quod Terentius dixit in 9:41 "seu ex locis hostes(?) sumpsimus ex posterioribus proficiscuntur"
"seu ex locis, quos desumpsimus …
TERENTIUS: EX OMNIBUS MAXIMUS.
TERENTIUS EST DOMINUS
Latinus sermo bonus. Eloqutio italica, sed distincta.
Immo utitur Terentius Tunberg pronuntiatu restituto.
Definitivamente, la lingua latina mai aveva la pronuncia italiana. Impossibile che i romani pronunciano tutte queste consonanti finale in tante parole accompagnati con questa -ae que solamente i italiani fanno. Parlo del presentatore.
È solamente la mia opinione.
Hai ragione. L'accento latino non era dinamico ma melodico. Ma non aggiunge -ae è piutosto un schwa.
nisi latine loqui puer irascatur Dominus ad viros
Well, if you are going to mangle the Latin tongue, I guess doing it with an Italian accent is best...
I quite like it. BTW Just got a couple of good subscriptions from you. Do you follow "Prince Sterling"?
Francois Miville No, the Romans didn't speak Etruscan, although there were lots of Etruscan speakers around in early republican times. As to early Italian, Vulgar Latin gradually evolved into the several Italian dialects, but in the first centuries BC and CE that vulgar Latin was by and large the 'official' Latin that has become the written standard from Cicero's time onward. The upper classes liked to speak and read Greek, besides their native Latin.
Quid tū nī nōbīs dēmōnstrās quam rēctē tua vōx sonet, ō sevēre castīgātor?
Mihi bene placet colloquio lieberalis inter praeceptores non modo res praelegere sed etiam sine chartula dicere ut oratore 😊