Lingua Latina docente Annula Llewellyn

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  • Опубліковано 12 кві 2010
  • Nancy (Annula) Llewellyn, Associate Professor of Latin at Wyoming Catholic College (USA) y Vice-President of the "Septentrionale Americanum Latinitatis Vivae Institutum (SALVI, www.latin.org), muestra Quomodo Latini sermonis tirocinium apte agitetur secundum methodum ab Iohanne Rassias excogitatam, en el transcurso de las VI Jornadas de Culturaclasica.com, celebradas en Mérida (Badajoz, España) del 9 al 11 de abril de 2010.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 9

  • @HConstantine
    @HConstantine 12 років тому

    @attlee45 Just a PhD in Classics and lots of classroom experience. But clearly I don't anything. I don't have my own youtube channel.

  • @ivanradu2503
    @ivanradu2503 2 роки тому

    Tempus docendi est!

  • @Mersenne100
    @Mersenne100 12 років тому +1

    The use of "church" Latin is in fact just using the pronunciation of modern Italian. I question whether there ever was a "church" Latin per se. I think it's just the pronunciation of late Latin.

  • @attlee45
    @attlee45 12 років тому

    @HConstantine
    I knew Nancy in Grad school and would rate her Latin against anyone's. Try doing something positive yourself rather than carping. What are your qualifications?

  • @MagisterSaxonides
    @MagisterSaxonides 11 років тому

    Okay, when we all get caught up in a vehiculum temporis and find ourselves suddenly at Tully's villa urbana, you can be the one to step forward and impress him, dulcedine tua orationis vocisque suavitate.
    (...Μὲ τὴν εὐκαιρία, μπρὲ Κῶστα, εἶμαι κι ἐγὼ ἄθεος, οὔτε κάνω ποτὲ τὸ σταυρό, μὰ χρησιμοποιῶ καὶ διδάσκω στοὺς μαθητές μου τὴν οὕτω-λεγόμενη "ἐκκλησιαστικὴ" προφορά - δηλαδή, τὴν προφορὰ τῶν σημερινῶν, ζώντων κατοίκων τῆς Αἰώνιας Πόλης!)

  • @attlee45
    @attlee45 12 років тому

    We are all Ph.Ds, dear boy - Nancy in Classics and myself in Roman History. Do try to be more positive though. Nancy is an excellent teacher and latinist. She has no speech impediment. You give no consideration to the nervousness that comes even over experienced teachers when being filmed. I actually prefer the hard consonants of Ciceronian Latin myself, but do not believe that we really know how it sounded in antiquity, making this rather a pointless argument. L.S. Chappell Ph.D.

  • @HConstantine
    @HConstantine 12 років тому +1

    So she makes no effort to pronounce any letter correctly, except the r, and that comes out like she has a speech impediment.
    Constantly making that unclean sign of death must have harmed her brain. Those 'c's are strictly church Latin. Cicero would be laughing pretty hard.