@@lightninginmyhands4878 Talk about missing the joke... There are *no* native Latin speakers left in the world. Luke's native language is English, not Latin. The joke is that he's so good at Latin people mistake him for a native Latin speaker, possibly a time traveller.
I studied Latin for seven years throughout middle school and high school and it was my favourite subject and I always scored very high in it. To this day it's my favourite language, I love it so much and it still saddens me that it's pretty useless in todays world 😢
I want to thank everyone who was here for the open and welcoming atmosphere, because since my high school days of the most horrible translation method of LA->EN, I never really enjoyed Latin except once when I composed a little play about Jack and the Beanstalk. That was fun. Also, in 2018 when I was in both Pompeii and Ostium, at the Theatres, I pulled out my phone loaded with Vergil and recited (for my own satisfaction and to the applause of the few there) the first few lines of the Æneid. That was satisfying, too. But always lurked in the background that I could never speak it, since we were taught Latin in the old method, and with guilt and shame if you didn't do things just right. THIS (Luke's class) is the way to go. And, having gotten the Traupman book just in time, that is a good way to learn, also. Salvete omnes!
I studied Advanced Latin at high school for three years. It was all about conjugations and declensions, and translating Caesar's Expeditions to Britain (54 BC) into English. We never learned to speak Latin.
Simply amazing, Luke! Very rarely do I have the time to join a live stream (I watch your videos the next day) so you can imagine the buzz I got from seeing my name on screen and practicing my Latin with you! I learned a ton of useful language today, and had a lot of fun, too, so - maximas gratias ex oppido meo hiberniae, magister optime! Cura ut valea!
Man I'm so glad there are people like you who values these little things and has the care to teach people. Good for you don't let anyone tell you what you're doing doesn't matter not that you would anyways. Gratias
Just finished my last latin class (moving to the next stage of education aha) and so excited and thank you!! For creating these to be able to carry on with it
I've always wanted to learn Latin, but it was not a subject when I went to highschool (I'm 48yrs old, dang I'm old) and as such never had an easy opportunity to learn it. And I studied to be a computer technician in college which also didn't have Latin as a course either. I only speak English fluently. I know a little bit of french but when I'm listening to it I am translating it into English first before I am associating the words into the stuff the words represent. Likewise I first think stuff in English then convert to french. I've often wondered what English sounds like to non speakers. I found a way to do that by first reducing the volume on a video and then defocusing on the words and their seperation from each other until I hear them but am not listening to what is being said. It was quite an eye opener. English sounds pretty much like any other language that you can't understand but at the same time has a distinctness to it like other languages have. You can know it's french or German etc... Without understanding a word of it. I often thought damn how do they know one word from another when they speak that fast? It's the same way I can understand English spoken fast and how I can hear the same sentence spoken with subtle emphasis put onto a different word three or four times and know each one is different in what it means. It can be a statement of fact, a question to be answered, or rhetorical, or sarcastic. Even the weight of impact or importance can be denoted. And that's without using any number of synonyms to further modify a sentences meaning. It's not surprising people say English is hard to master. Such subtlety adds a level of complexity that takes years to fully grasp and can easily change depending on country of origin. Then there's slang. Which brings me back to Latin and it has 7 basic prepositions one for yourself, male female your equal, superior and lesser. Add that to the rest of it and it's no wonder the language didn't proliferate fully or survive. Yet there's nothing like speaking some Latin phrase that doesn't instantly give you extra IQ points and say I'm fucking smart I am. And think twice before debating an alternative viewpoint in a social situation you'll probably lose. Lol.
You’re onto something here amice mi - learning to speak it will encourage people to learn it, no doubt! I can see this taking off. Great great class!! 🥳
This was really helpful! It was really easy to understand and I feel that I was able to learn so much more than if I just read the book. Please do more like this!
@@ScorpioMartianus Thank you for the wonderful work you are doing with Latin sir, I almost gave up, but after finding your channel, I am very optimistic about Latin again. Again, thanks.
In scholā Latīnae dixī. Sciō grammāticam et textōs vertere, sed vōlō Latīnae lōquī. Daco-romānus sum, igitur lingua Latīna similē linguae meae mihi paret. Multās grātiās prō Latīnam docēre!
I've found your channel lately and I can get a lot of tips for studing latin and greek now. It's amazing. Thank you for this. The book you recommend in this vedio seems very usuful. By the way, could you recommend a book like this for studing classical greek conversation? I want to speak in classical greek also. I'm finding an Attic greek book but it is also good about Koine, if there is any books about Attic. Thank you!
13:00 yes - Ita vero... 14:30 quid novi = что нового (родительный падеж = casus genitivus) quid novī, bellī, pulchrī,, malī, tristis, laetī - что хорошего, прекрасного, плохого, печального, веселого
Salvē Lūcius! Et.... ah, Buongiorno a tutti Mihi nōmen est Antonius It's pretty cool, and should not be taken for granted, that we can just learn ancient languages from the comfort of our own homes *for free* It's magic I tells ya Grātiās Legatus, we're one step closer to putting the Roman Empire in space >:D
Ego vere linguam Latinam amo. Pronunciatio facilis est, sed difficultates habeo vocalibus longis et brevibus et syllabis longis et brevibus. Sed sine difficultate Latine scriptum intellego.
You are a really good teacher and your Latin sounds natural (even if we can't compare to any native speaker :)) but many methods tell us to not pronounce the H in Latin, and in Roman languages we never do... So why do you do so ? Sounds a bit weird to me
So, I was wondering because I've come across some webpages talking about the nasalization of vowels before n or m or the pronunciation of g before n as "ng" meaning that magnus would be pronounced as "mangnus." Can you please provide some clarification in this matter? Thank you!
Oh not at all! You need LLPSI. It’s the way. You’ll learn much more there. But this book focuses just on conversation and oral proficiency; LLPSI focuses on reading fluency.
Maumatrices Polonice "miauczadła" sunt 😺 Maumator meus Marcellus nunc mortus est 😿 (requiescat in pace et Deus benedicat memoria ejus 💜), sed maumatrix mea Ludovica vive et vale 😺
Hi! Thanks for the video! I have to admit that I have frequent issues with this book: I find very often words used with meanings that I can't find on the dictionary. For example: does "trado" really mean "to introduce"?
If I try to learn Latin from English I get confused but if I learn it from my mother tongue Spanish it is easy. That’s why English is a barbarian language it sounds “bar bar bar bar”
Latin should make a comeback as the global Lingua Franca!
Nēi, gutiska razda.
Why?
It would be a third or fourth revival, if anything, since it was already a lingua franca in Europe for the educated up until after the Renaissance.
Minime minime quare QUARE NON
Agreed. Especially for the western world.
We have to really treasure the man, he is the only native speaker of Latin left in the world!
@Rodent's Revenge *except that that
your right
Boo. There are more. Don’t be so dramatic. That’s how you keep other brilliant Latin teachers and learners down.
@@lightninginmyhands4878 Talk about missing the joke...
There are *no* native Latin speakers left in the world. Luke's native language is English, not Latin. The joke is that he's so good at Latin people mistake him for a native Latin speaker, possibly a time traveller.
@@MrSupdup im going to study latin so hard i want people to mistake me for an ancient roman
Best Latin teacher on YT. Change my mind.
He’s simply the best!
I’m proud to be a voice in a chorus
I can change your mind. Polymathy is better....
....ya.....argue that one...
@@ryanlabrie1527 But he doesn’t have such good pronunciation!
100% AGREED
I study latin in High school here in italy, but Nobody teaches us how to speak this beautiful language!
I studied Latin for seven years throughout middle school and high school and it was my favourite subject and I always scored very high in it. To this day it's my favourite language, I love it so much and it still saddens me that it's pretty useless in todays world 😢
It's really not at all useless!
I want to spend an afternoon with this guy - he is so freakin' awesome!
I want to thank everyone who was here for the open and welcoming atmosphere, because since my high school days of the most horrible translation method of LA->EN, I never really enjoyed Latin except once when I composed a little play about Jack and the Beanstalk. That was fun. Also, in 2018 when I was in both Pompeii and Ostium, at the Theatres, I pulled out my phone loaded with Vergil and recited (for my own satisfaction and to the applause of the few there) the first few lines of the Æneid. That was satisfying, too. But always lurked in the background that I could never speak it, since we were taught Latin in the old method, and with guilt and shame if you didn't do things just right.
THIS (Luke's class) is the way to go. And, having gotten the Traupman book just in time, that is a good way to learn, also.
Salvete omnes!
That’s very kind! I look forward to seeing you in the next lesson!
there's a hyperlearn interlinear latin book called colloquia dialogues
grátiās.
If any Classical Latin book is recommended by you, then I’ll probably order it. Having tools in the toolbox is a good thing.
This was AWESOME! I've watched the whole thing and I'd absolutely love it if you made more of these! 😍
This live is a masterpiece, thanks for this amazing opportunity!
Thanks for being there!
We're so lucky for having Luke making available such good content on UA-cam to learn latin.
Thank you very much, Luke.
Very kind!
I studied Advanced Latin at high school for three years. It was all about conjugations and declensions, and translating Caesar's Expeditions to Britain (54 BC) into English. We never learned to speak Latin.
1:21:48 Ut soleo, hodie frigidissimus est.
Lukius, Tu es “magistrissimus”.
Ave caeser morituri te salutant .
sic transit gloria mundi
Simply amazing, Luke! Very rarely do I have the time to join a live stream (I watch your videos the next day) so you can imagine the buzz I got from seeing my name on screen and practicing my Latin with you! I learned a ton of useful language today, and had a lot of fun, too, so - maximas gratias ex oppido meo hiberniae, magister optime! Cura ut valea!
I’m so glad you were there. Your responses helped thousands today and thousands more in the future to learn Latin!
Man I'm so glad there are people like you who values these little things and has the care to teach people. Good for you don't let anyone tell you what you're doing doesn't matter not that you would anyways. Gratias
Me encantó, gracias! Keep it up! Saludos desde Argentina, amigo.
Just finished my last latin class (moving to the next stage of education aha) and so excited and thank you!! For creating these to be able to carry on with it
Great! Never stop with Latin hehe
Habito in Terra Reginae, in Terra Australis.
Thank you for the video, it's so exciting to be interactive this way.
Thanks so much for being a member!
I've always wanted to learn Latin, but it was not a subject when I went to highschool (I'm 48yrs old, dang I'm old) and as such never had an easy opportunity to learn it. And I studied to be a computer technician in college which also didn't have Latin as a course either. I only speak English fluently. I know a little bit of french but when I'm listening to it I am translating it into English first before I am associating the words into the stuff the words represent. Likewise I first think stuff in English then convert to french. I've often wondered what English sounds like to non speakers. I found a way to do that by first reducing the volume on a video and then defocusing on the words and their seperation from each other until I hear them but am not listening to what is being said. It was quite an eye opener. English sounds pretty much like any other language that you can't understand but at the same time has a distinctness to it like other languages have. You can know it's french or German etc... Without understanding a word of it. I often thought damn how do they know one word from another when they speak that fast? It's the same way I can understand English spoken fast and how I can hear the same sentence spoken with subtle emphasis put onto a different word three or four times and know each one is different in what it means. It can be a statement of fact, a question to be answered, or rhetorical, or sarcastic. Even the weight of impact or importance can be denoted. And that's without using any number of synonyms to further modify a sentences meaning. It's not surprising people say English is hard to master. Such subtlety adds a level of complexity that takes years to fully grasp and can easily change depending on country of origin. Then there's slang. Which brings me back to Latin and it has 7 basic prepositions one for yourself, male female your equal, superior and lesser. Add that to the rest of it and it's no wonder the language didn't proliferate fully or survive. Yet there's nothing like speaking some Latin phrase that doesn't instantly give you extra IQ points and say I'm fucking smart I am. And think twice before debating an alternative viewpoint in a social situation you'll probably lose. Lol.
How convenient I found your channel yesterday while I want to learn Latin and this pops up in my recommended
Great timing!
You’re onto something here amice mi - learning to speak it will encourage people to learn it, no doubt! I can see this taking off. Great great class!! 🥳
Thanks very much! Many more to come.
Saludos desde Venezuela. Me encanta este canal. Muy buenos vídeos
Gracias
This was really helpful! It was really easy to understand and I feel that I was able to learn so much more than if I just read the book. Please do more like this!
Oh wow great! What a nice compliment
Ave. Carmen es mihi nomen. Celtiberica sum, Barcino, Hispania. Vale
Lūcius spends his precious time to make free videos for us! really appreciate it Lūcius!
Thanks for watching! It’s my pleasure
Salve Luci!You’ve inspired me to learn Latin.Gratias!
That’s great!
I really enjoyed this. Thank you so much for making these videos!
Thanks for watching!
I gotta get that book.
Optimissime, Magister! Latine, mihi placet valde! Ego tibi gratias! Merci beaucoup ! Ce fut un moment formidable ! Encore ! Bisous 😘😘❤️🍀🌹
Thanks for these!
This was a great video, very pleasant to watch. Thank you.
Dude, you are the best. Thank you so much.
Ab italiano, desidero tibi pro tuo magno labore congratulari.
Tu es verus auctor spiritus haustus!
Grātiās!
@@ScorpioMartianus parvam interrogationem haberem: qualis libros mutatione in melio linguæ latinæ uteris tu?
(Spero grammaticam quæstionis meæ emendatam sit)
Really love this channel, great work sir.
Thanks for being here!
@@ScorpioMartianus Thank you for the wonderful work you are doing with Latin sir, I almost gave up, but after finding your channel, I am very optimistic about Latin again. Again, thanks.
Salve Luci! Mihi nomen Catarina est. Hodie bene valeo. In civitate California habito.
This was for beginners? I was SUPER lost.
Use the English text on screen to help. 😊
It’s meant for immersion you won’t understand at first but if you keep going and immersing yourself than you’ll learn latin search comprehensive input
Small steps, eventually we can walk,then run.
Sheer brilliance! What a great way to start my day. Thank you!
Ego Habito in Indica
I just started watching a few weeks ago, I'm hooked lol
OK. This is truly optime. Very inspiring.
Thanks!
Beatisime factum Luci!
Valde utile!! Gratias tibi!
Grātiās quod spectāstī!
Novās rēs didicī, hodiē! Ūtilissima lectiō!
Grātiās, Alexander!
Thank you 👍🙏
Gratias ex novus video!
Luke, por favor, ¿cuando será la próxima clase en vivo?
Saludos desde Cali, Colombia.
¡Hola! En tres semanas
Gratias tibi!
In scholā Latīnae dixī. Sciō grammāticam et textōs vertere, sed vōlō Latīnae lōquī. Daco-romānus sum, igitur lingua Latīna similē linguae meae mihi paret. Multās grātiās prō Latīnam docēre!
I love this
Gratias maximas, Luci optime! Emissionem vivam audire non poteram sed pelliculam iam discipulis meis ostendo.
I've found your channel lately and I can get a lot of tips for studing latin and greek now. It's amazing. Thank you for this. The book you recommend in this vedio seems very usuful. By the way, could you recommend a book like this for studing classical greek conversation? I want to speak in classical greek also. I'm finding an Attic greek book but it is also good about Koine, if there is any books about Attic. Thank you!
13:00 yes - Ita vero...
14:30 quid novi = что нового (родительный падеж = casus genitivus)
quid novī, bellī, pulchrī,, malī, tristis, laetī - что хорошего, прекрасного, плохого, печального, веселого
Russian is the best
certe te novimus, Luci
Gratias ex Lutetia
That's so cool!
I have seen some translations that shorten Salvē to just Avē. I believe its the same thing. Please correct me if im incorrect though.
This video of mine will help ua-cam.com/video/u84EgaNKLAM/v-deo.html
Could you read some of Sermones Romani?
I’ve recorded the entire book for my Patreon supporters: www.patreon.com/posts/45489934
From England in 865AD ..."Eala! Wes ðu hal!!"
Salvē Lūcius! Et.... ah, Buongiorno a tutti
Mihi nōmen est Antonius
It's pretty cool, and should not be taken for granted, that we can just learn ancient languages from the comfort of our own homes *for free*
It's magic I tells ya
Grātiās Legatus, we're one step closer to putting the Roman Empire in space >:D
Salvē, Antōnī! Yes it’s a wonderful world we live in for this alone.
@@ScorpioMartianus You've just subtly corrected a grammatical error on my part, I think XD
It should be "Salvē Lūcī" right?
Lucus Novaum Reginaldum est!
Equidem nūllō modō sum tālī laude dignus!
Nomen mihi est Maximus Decimus Meridius
Salve, Lucius,
what would you comment on the greeting "Servus"?
ua-cam.com/video/ZAsNO9eXLgM/v-deo.html
What is your background with these languages to give you such a wide array of capability within the language field?
in Brasil habito
You need one more tier on your Patreon: Mauatōrēs!😂
😸
Permittiturne omittere "est", e.g., "Mihi nōmen Petrus"; "Dē gustibus nōn disputandum"?
Certē
Gee! I won't miss the next live stream! Is there any schedule? Couldn't find one o.o
11:16 When your Latin is so bad that you can't even make full sentences, so you take "in" and some random word you learned in elementary school. 😅
Macte, optimum tempus sūmpsī. Nunc mihi etiam quīdam liber emendus est.
Gaudeō tibi placuisse!
Vocābula 'nōvī', 'hāctenus', 'cujātis', 'quī', 'perquam' utilissima erunt mihi, summās grātiās Luci, semper aliquid nŏvī 😉 possum discere scholīs tuīs
Ego vere linguam Latinam amo. Pronunciatio facilis est, sed difficultates habeo vocalibus longis et brevibus et syllabis longis et brevibus. Sed sine difficultate Latine scriptum intellego.
I hope to join the next class! Estne “Lauren” aut “Laurentia”?
I say Laurēna.
❤❤❤
Is this every Sunday?
Yup
You are a really good teacher and your Latin sounds natural (even if we can't compare to any native speaker :)) but many methods tell us to not pronounce the H in Latin, and in Roman languages we never do... So why do you do so ? Sounds a bit weird to me
Thanks! H is pronounced in Classical Latin, which is clearly explained by the ancient grammarians.
@@ScorpioMartianus wow, I'm happy to know that now :)) thanks for telling me
(This is my practice)
Ego habito in Coloradam, mihi nomen est James. Habitasne in America?
Where can one buy this text book?
Link in the description!
Thank you!
I´d like to know what's the difference between scio and novi ?
The same difference exists in Italian and Spanish
Quid est Alexi Lucī?
I heard Luke say that there are 10,000 latin speakers in the world, must be even more now that its 3 years later?
I agree. I have no way to count them, though.
So, I was wondering because I've come across some webpages talking about the nasalization of vowels before n or m or the pronunciation of g before n as "ng" meaning that magnus would be pronounced as "mangnus." Can you please provide some clarification in this matter? Thank you!
Yup that’s correct. Probably both that and /gn/ were current in Classical Latin
Precisamos de lkegenda em portugues. We need legend in portuguise.
Ego in Svetica habito?
Is this a better way to learn latin than LLPSI? I spent over a hundres dollars on those books, so I hope I shouldn't have gotten this one instead 😬
Oh not at all! You need LLPSI. It’s the way. You’ll learn much more there. But this book focuses just on conversation and oral proficiency; LLPSI focuses on reading fluency.
@@ScorpioMartianus Oh, ok! Thanks! Would you recommend getting this one as well?
If you want to study speaking, absolutely. But LLPSI is the way to truly learn the language
@@ScorpioMartianus Alright! Thank you so much!
❤
Maumatrices Polonice "miauczadła" sunt 😺 Maumator meus Marcellus nunc mortus est 😿 (requiescat in pace et Deus benedicat memoria ejus 💜), sed maumatrix mea Ludovica vive et vale 😺
Hi! Thanks for the video! I have to admit that I have frequent issues with this book: I find very often words used with meanings that I can't find on the dictionary. For example: does "trado" really mean "to introduce"?
Yes.
@@ScorpioMartianus Why can't i find that meaning in any dictionary?
@@DiomedesDioscuro I’d guess it’s conjugated
If I try to learn Latin from English I get confused but if I learn it from my mother tongue Spanish it is easy. That’s why English is a barbarian language it sounds “bar bar bar bar”
Mihi nomine Benedictus est
is this the ecclesiastial latin or classical latin?
Watch this entire video and you will understand: ua-cam.com/video/RMKImmXLb3c/v-deo.htmlsi=MKmSj0qHMlLfe1Yz
"Transrōmānus sum, Rōmānus nātus in corpore barbarō" 😅
Ego in barcino habito
49 15
Amicum tuum esse volo. Amici qui latine loqui possunt non habeo sed egeo.
Cui
Salve, mihi nomen est Márius
Salus tibi
I checked the price of Conversational Latin for Oral Proficiency on Amazon. Is it a joke?
It’s $40 on Amazon