A Roman goes into a bar and is ordering: "May I get a Martinus please!" The beekeeper replies: "You mean a Martini, man." The Roman: "If I would like to drink a double I would have said so sir."
At around 6:00 it really hits. A stunning new world that our ancestors couldn't have even imagined, yet so similar to the frigid rocky hills of Pannonia at the same time.
I'm realizing that the dead Latin language is having a surprising, urging boom, and there'll be much more people wanting to pick it up. Your moment has come up, I've been studying it auto-didactically, and it has much more to give off to the language community. This input comprehensible video in Latin helps me a lot with my Latin language learning, you'll have to post much more videos just like this on youtube, I cheer you up with my emphasis!
Latin is insanely valuable, even if it's no one's first language, it's vocabulary alone is relevant because of how great and influential the Romans were. In law and in Roman Christianity, it's practically needed.
@@velvetnightmare3133 Like the scene in Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home, where the aquarium director asks Kirk, “Are you from outer space?” And Kirk replies, “No, I’m from Iowa. I only work in outer space.”
Mr Scorpio, I can barely describe how wonderful your channel is. You're so deeply charismatic & your videos are wonderfully structured & pedagogic. Not only do I learn a shitload of latin, but the content is so wholesome that it helps with my anxiety & depression! Thank you for your good work!
Having the subtitles in Latin and in English is really helpful. With the dual-subtitle add-ons, it's really nice to show classes videos like this with both on the screen. Multas gratias tibi ago!
Not sure which addon DW uses, but I found this if that might be it. chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/youtube-dual-subtitles/hkbdddpiemdeibjoknnofflfgbgnebcm
@@ScorpioMartianus Yes. Definitely. I like showing them with very little pressure - but asking who knows what new vocab words at the end for bonus points.
I just got a crazy idea. Wouldn't it be great to make a latin cooking video Jamie Oliver stye, or something like that, except, making roman food and describing everything in latin ? :) :)
It would! There should be one in the future on Andreas Alcor YT channel, with not only Roman but modern food and national dishes... he's a young Latinist who is yet to shine the Latin sky with his creativity and brilliance.
Have you tried the Latin podcasts? "Legio XIII" is one that Luke creates, and there are quite a few others. Not as helpful to be able to see and hear objects and animals, but still good.
I'm scared by how much I understand having never studied latin properly. Given your relatively slow pace and very clear enunciation, it's quite understandable if you know just a teeny bit of latin and understand a latin language! Love it.
You know how there are many channels, podcasts and recordings that get labelled as ASMR? I could listen to your spoken Latin just to listen to it. What an awesome language. I wish I could speak it even on a little kid level.
These videos are so helpful for learning latin, i always have problems with it because you can usually not use it when talking to other people and it's nor usual to speak it in my school so you can't even learn it while hearing what it sounds like. So thank you for this, it really helps
Pennsylvania represent! Ego quoque e Pennsylvania venio. Magno desiderio teneor illius loci. Modus pelliculam hanc faciendi iucundus visu est et facile intellectu. Perdiu ita facere pelliculam in animo habui, et fortasse nunc est tempus id tandem facere. Thanks for the inspiration!
Please do more of these walk and talk videos where you talk about... whatever! It really brings Latin closer to our experiences. It's the same type of experience you would get as a kid walking with your dad while he explains to you what everything around you is...it just hits deep, I find.
I still understand very little, but it's so pleasant to hear you! As a native brasilian portuguese speaker, latin sounds familiar and confortable to me and this video was so peaceful that amplified this feeling. Even not understanding much (yet) I felt like wanting to walk around this place too. 😏
i was born in bryn mawr pa and went to twin valley high school in morgantown...then we moved away...that was 1991 when we left i went to utah and finnished school ..i always missed PA..im in massachussettes now
Muito interessante! Conheço apenas algumas palavras em latim, mas mostrando os elementos da paisagem é possível entender muita coisa. One more subscriber :)
You should make more of these, the level of difficulty is pretty unique: the language isn't as complex as in the classical texts, yet it's still proper, everyday classical Latin, moreover in spoken form which adds to the difficulty. Great content. I'd bookmarked that video one month ago, when I started studying Latin (currently at chapter 28 of LLPSI), and I came back to it a couple times and watched a few seconds of it to measure my progress, but it was preeetty hard. Today, for the first time I understood the first sentence (conjūnctīvus imperfectī included), so I figured I might keep on watching and well... I watched it to the end and understood pretty much everything except a few words which I had to look up, all this without the subtitles ^^ To be more precise, I took one semester's Latin in college 15 years ago, I speak French natively and either speak or "understand fluently" the other 3 big Western Romance languages, and am a general language nerd, BUT I'm still pretty proud. Next goal: being able to start reading decently comfortably Dē bellō Gallicō in one month from now, which was pretty much the reason why I started this journey... we'll see if I can make it. BTW I couldn't help but see a reference precisely to Dē bellō Gallicō at 5:30, "ad reficiendōs animōs" haha
Awwwww, it was such a pleasure seeing you in nature with all the sunny weather, little ducks, geese and even frog. Hearing about this interesting "aquatic structure" and childhood memories was heart-warming. Loved your duck-noises 🤣
hey luke, really enjoy your videos :) I noticed some errors in the english subtitles and I don't really know how to post corrections to them without comming off ass rude :( but I will list them below 3:01 "there's my shawod" > "there's my shadow" 3:31 "and thi stream" > "and this stream" 3:37 "flow by my house where is over there" > "flow by my house which is over there"
Surprisingly easy to follow along with what you are saying using the English subtitles. Thank you for a fascinating look at a rural area of Pennsylvania. Brilliant.
Alors, iste tipo de pellicolle me placet multissimum.. oui je calque d'autres langues just to say, yes these kinds of Latin promenades sont très agréables, fun et pulchre
I have some hope that I did learn some latin in school, because I did partially understand what you were saying. But I still wouldn't know enough to reply. It was interesting!
i really liked this. even though i only studied about 300 hours of latin 15 years ago, because of the context and the subtitles I was able to tell what was going on. keep up the good work.
Wow, so beautiful. I've lived in the south of Washington (state) all my life of 20 years haha, and it was a real treat to see the nature of another side of the country!! Nature here is fairly raw, and wild, and things that have been built are relatively new, so to see relatively old structures like the walls of that canal, is very interesting. I would love to visit one day, I imagine hiking would be not only beautiful but educational for the history of the country/settlements! Thank you so much for this video! Learning latin is much easier/natural (and beautiful!) with your videos!
@@ScorpioMartianus I hope you enjoy your future hikes, I know that I will enjoy any video that comes from it ♥️ And if you ever want to hike in the PNW, we locals know the best spots haha!
This was a wonderful video, it reminds me of Magister Craft's videos he makes in his amazing Minecraft world, but in real life! Love it, and I look forward to seeing more!
0:18 Nova(m) Caesarea(m)? So is "Jersey" just an anglicized take on "Caesarea" or did is "Caesarea" your Latin take on "Jersey"? Fascinating either way
@@ScorpioMartianus Interesting. What's the etymology behind it? Is it rendered that way for convenience or is there a historical connection between the two names?
0:18 Nova Caesarea! Ibi habitat mea familia! ...and now I have learned that I've been accenting this name wrong for more than two decades; at college orientation, one of the guides explained the Latin on the university seal and said [nova čeza:rea] and that's what the pronunciation, at least in Ecclesiastical, has been inside my head all this time. :)
Hi Mark! Yeah I used to say it that way too. And the stress accent will of course be the same in all pronunciations. The reason I favor Caesaréa is because of the Greek name en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caesarea Καισάρεια Just like Ἀλεξάνδρεια in Latin becomes Alexandrēa, or later 1cBC Alexandrīa, the long vowel in the penultimate syllable necessitates the stress fall there. But that isn’t to say that imitating the later/Modern Greek accent placement is inherently wrong. Also, the etymology of the island of Jersey is not clear, and possibly isn’t from Caesar at all. Still, if I had to give best options, I would recommend Caesarēa or Caesarīa.
Trovo molto bello e divertente il fatto che si siano create delle parole latine per dei termini che i latini non usavano, perché magari non esistevano o non erano conosciute (come il fiume Delaware o il New Jersey)
Infatti questi termini si creano allo stesso tempo che si importano in italiano o in qualsiasi lingua della nostra epoca; io latino si parla senza intervallo ormai 2300 anni. Infatti, moltissimi posti anche nel Mondo Nuovo avevano un nome in latino prima di spagnolo o inglese I francese.
I have a question. As a fellow linguist, I have often wondered if we could transport a Roman soldier into our time and teach him English, what would his accent sound like? I would assume it would sound more Italian like but I'm not sure as I am a student of Old English and know little of Latin or Italian.
@@ScorpioMartianus Any time. Just trying to learn Latin. Will try to create my own dialog at the bank of the Mississippi. We do get white caps on windy days. What would Mississippi be in Latin?
@@ScorpioMartianus Yeah, I understand that Duolingo is like a beginner, I used it for Italian. Thus, I am considering Latin as well; and other Romance languages. So thank you for the recommendation.
Optima pelicula Lucius, Si is in Italia, silva cum rivo quasi similis adest, sita in Mediolani septentrionali, "Lungo Villoresi" nominata est. Da mihi veniam, per mea mala scriptura in lingua latina.
Salve, Lucius, quomodo tu habes? (I've just started learning latin so all i know is basic greetings and introductory sentences but im hoping to learn more as i go!)
wanted to do sth like this in parallel English + Russian, but i'm too slow and lazy xD will do one day.. but damn, these videos make me wanna learn Latin. now i'll need to squeeze even more different things into my schedule.
Given the current worldwide goods transportation crisis, perhaps we should start utilizing the canal systems again. We may get things transported more quickly than waiting for a shipping container, a train, a semi or space on an airplane. lol
Voluntātem habeō, ut loquī sicut tū poterō. (I have the wish, that i will be able to speak like you). If i did some mistakes, someone might want to correct me, because i am learning right now and i am thankful for every advice :) Ps: i want my latin to be corrected, Not my english haha. Thanks for your vids Greatings from germany
It amazes me that this Roman is also fluent in English
Haha so kind
I'd almost mistake him for an American. Good to see Romans care about our barbaric tongue 😅
Almost as if he stepped out of a time machine and took a crash course in Future Anglo-Norman-Saxon!
A Roman goes into a bar and is ordering: "May I get a Martinus please!"
The beekeeper replies: "You mean a Martini, man."
The Roman: "If I would like to drink a double I would have said so sir."
Hahae
A true Roman should ask "may I get a Martinum"
I'm sure he's more surprised by the bees than the grammar
Something about a dude describing American locations in ancient Latin is just fucking _bonkers_ to me and I love it
I’m glad you like it!
ScorpioMartianus benē good
I don't know why, but the word combination of "fucking bonkers" is absolutely hilarious to me.
@@gunnarbrittany There has to be an equivalent in Latin, something that would show up in Soartacus.
At around 6:00 it really hits. A stunning new world that our ancestors couldn't have even imagined, yet so similar to the frigid rocky hills of Pannonia at the same time.
I'm realizing that the dead Latin language is having a surprising, urging boom, and there'll be much more people wanting to pick it up. Your moment has come up, I've been studying it auto-didactically, and it has much more to give off to the language community. This input comprehensible video in Latin helps me a lot with my Latin language learning, you'll have to post much more videos just like this on youtube, I cheer you up with my emphasis!
I’ll make more like this!
@@ScorpioMartianus Yes, please do!
Latin is insanely valuable, even if it's no one's first language, it's vocabulary alone is relevant because of how great and influential the Romans were. In law and in Roman Christianity, it's practically needed.
"Dead"
@@andreavoigtlander1087 Yes, dead. There are no native monolingual speakers of Latin, making it a dead language.
I imagine people walking past you and wondering where you’re from.
Just a Roman casually time traveling.
I would love for him to record answering in unaccented English: "oh Pennsylvania, you?"
😂😂😂
@@velvetnightmare3133 Like the scene in Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home, where the aquarium director asks Kirk, “Are you from outer space?”
And Kirk replies, “No, I’m from Iowa. I only work in outer space.”
I can say I'd flip my shit if I just ran across someone just speaking fluent-ass latin like this...but I know latin.
Placet multum, amīce! Latīna lingua vīvit!
Vīvit hercle!
Mr Scorpio, I can barely describe how wonderful your channel is. You're so deeply charismatic & your videos are wonderfully structured & pedagogic. Not only do I learn a shitload of latin, but the content is so wholesome that it helps with my anxiety & depression! Thank you for your good work!
That’s extremely kind of you! I’m very glad if you find them helpful. Thanks for such a nice comment
@@ScorpioMartianus New channel idea: "LATIN ASMR"
I always get a good laugh when he goes from 3 minutes of spoken Latin to say something in English.
Haha I know what you mean.
I reckon.
This Roman guy sure does a great American accent
He speaks Latin so much his voice sounds wrong in English xD
It wouldn't be so jarring if he spoke English in RP like a true Roman.
@@sussurus xD
Love ur name, one of my favorite composers
I didn't know Romans were so fluent in English. This one speaks flawlessly
Fun fact:
Habitants from Rio de Janeiro State, in Brazil, are called "Fluminenses" from the Latim "Flumine".
Legal!
Dude! I love your name! It got gravitas....
@@OscarRuiz-gj3mp dad was Very found of it. Marcus/Marcos is a kind of family name.
@@marcusviniciusmagalhaesdea3779
He was right to name you Marcus. Marcos would be the accusative plural
@@RexGalilae I didn't knew that. Thanks.
Having the subtitles in Latin and in English is really helpful. With the dual-subtitle add-ons, it's really nice to show classes videos like this with both on the screen. Multas gratias tibi ago!
Oh great! You mean you’re able to run both subtitle languages simultaneously?
Not sure which addon DW uses, but I found this if that might be it. chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/youtube-dual-subtitles/hkbdddpiemdeibjoknnofflfgbgnebcm
@@ScorpioMartianus Yes. Definitely. I like showing them with very little pressure - but asking who knows what new vocab words at the end for bonus points.
Love how you apply Latin declensions to American English place names. Maybe a topic for a video in the future?
Man you're doing us all such a service. Keeping it alive. Incredibly valuable.
I just got a crazy idea. Wouldn't it be great to make a latin cooking video Jamie Oliver stye, or something like that, except, making roman food and describing everything in latin ? :) :)
Fun! Too bad I can’t cook with any flare or skill 😅
It would! There should be one in the future on Andreas Alcor YT channel, with not only Roman but modern food and national dishes... he's a young Latinist who is yet to shine the Latin sky with his creativity and brilliance.
Ann Reardon from How to Cook That made a few Roman dishes like bread and cake that were from historical Ancient Roman recipes.
@@ScorpioMartianus lol i can cook if you narrate 😂
@@ScorpioMartianus Hehe. Well maybe someone else could cook and You would explain everything :)
Yes, you should defenetly do more of these videos. It is really nice to hear latin in a more casual way.
Thanks! Okay, I will
Have you tried the Latin podcasts? "Legio XIII" is one that Luke creates, and there are quite a few others. Not as helpful to be able to see and hear objects and animals, but still good.
0:46 there is a bend, a bend on the wall. A chingadera
Dad: Morning son, what are you watching?
Me: *D E L A W A R I U M*
I would watch 100 videos just like this, it's so relaxing
More to come!
I'm scared by how much I understand having never studied latin properly. Given your relatively slow pace and very clear enunciation, it's quite understandable if you know just a teeny bit of latin and understand a latin language! Love it.
Great!
@@ScorpioMartianus The gesturing and visual aids were also fantastic!
Fantastic content! Comprehensible input is a brilliant way to learn a language and there is a real lack of it in Latin. Please keep up the good work!
Thanks! I will
Because of oropel like you latín is not a dead language
I study Latin and I see all your Latin speaking videos !
GRATIAS !
As a Brazilian Portuguese speaker who has never studied Latin, it amazes me that we Romance speakers can yet understand a lot from it.
You know how there are many channels, podcasts and recordings that get labelled as ASMR? I could listen to your spoken Latin just to listen to it. What an awesome language. I wish I could speak it even on a little kid level.
Thanks! Also there is this: ua-cam.com/users/LukeRanieriASMR
@@ScorpioMartianus Well looky there! Sweet! Just subbed.
Amazing to hear the proper pronunciations on UA-cam. Multas gratias tibi ago!
This is stupendous!
Grazie, Davide!
These videos are so helpful for learning latin, i always have problems with it because you can usually not use it when talking to other people and it's nor usual to speak it in my school so you can't even learn it while hearing what it sounds like. So thank you for this, it really helps
this feels like you’re giving us a tour, so fun i’m all for it :)
Pennsylvania represent! Ego quoque e Pennsylvania venio. Magno desiderio teneor illius loci. Modus pelliculam hanc faciendi iucundus visu est et facile intellectu. Perdiu ita facere pelliculam in animo habui, et fortasse nunc est tempus id tandem facere. Thanks for the inspiration!
Please do more of these walk and talk videos where you talk about... whatever! It really brings Latin closer to our experiences. It's the same type of experience you would get as a kid walking with your dad while he explains to you what everything around you is...it just hits deep, I find.
Nova vocabula hac pellicula mihi discita:
- lepidus
- plerumque
- saltem
- ratis
- rivulus
- aquula
- scintilla
- asellus
- fondeo
- increbresco
- crepitus
- anser
- arvum
Gratias valde tibi ago, magister!
I still understand very little, but it's so pleasant to hear you! As a native brasilian portuguese speaker, latin sounds familiar and confortable to me and this video was so peaceful that amplified this feeling. Even not understanding much (yet) I felt like wanting to walk around this place too. 😏
You’re very kind, Rachel! I hope the subtitles help.
Every time I watch one of these I can understand a few more words and its a wonderful feeling!
That’s great!
Ave tibi ! Bravo à vous, vive le latin très belle langue , gratias tibi!
Verba poetica mihi perplacent ... frondere ... virescere ... scintillas ... strepitus ... crepitus 🍃
Spectabo et audibo plurimas vices.
Gaudeō hoc tibi placēre!
Oh, quam mīrificī sunt locī prope domum tuam, forūnāte! Utinam habērēmus tantōs rīvōs Νέᾳ Μηχανιῶνι. Tantum ἁλυκίδα ūnam habēmus...
Kocham twoje filmy Luke! Zawsze służą pomocą w nauce.
i was born in bryn mawr pa and went to twin valley high school in morgantown...then we moved away...that was 1991 when we left i went to utah and finnished school ..i always missed PA..im in massachussettes now
Magnum opus! Spectaculam tuam benissime valde mihi placet, haud procul Transgresso Washingtonii, Hirci Comitatum habito!
Grātiās!
Muito interessante! Conheço apenas algumas palavras em latim, mas mostrando os elementos da paisagem é possível entender muita coisa. One more subscriber :)
Obrigado!
I adore your classical pronunciation. Ego adoram tuus loqui Latinum Classicum
You should make more of these, the level of difficulty is pretty unique: the language isn't as complex as in the classical texts, yet it's still proper, everyday classical Latin, moreover in spoken form which adds to the difficulty. Great content.
I'd bookmarked that video one month ago, when I started studying Latin (currently at chapter 28 of LLPSI), and I came back to it a couple times and watched a few seconds of it to measure my progress, but it was preeetty hard. Today, for the first time I understood the first sentence (conjūnctīvus imperfectī included), so I figured I might keep on watching and well... I watched it to the end and understood pretty much everything except a few words which I had to look up, all this without the subtitles ^^
To be more precise, I took one semester's Latin in college 15 years ago, I speak French natively and either speak or "understand fluently" the other 3 big Western Romance languages, and am a general language nerd, BUT I'm still pretty proud. Next goal: being able to start reading decently comfortably Dē bellō Gallicō in one month from now, which was pretty much the reason why I started this journey... we'll see if I can make it.
BTW I couldn't help but see a reference precisely to Dē bellō Gallicō at 5:30, "ad reficiendōs animōs" haha
I’m very pleased to hear that! Yes I’ll make more.
Gracias por tu trabajo
Please do more of this kind of video, relaxing & educational, also "ohhh anates!" is always good as an aside
Thanks so much! I will do more
Man I watch your videos every day and I just love your passion. Its infectious!
Thanks!
At arbores tam mortuae videntur etsi apud aquae magnam copiam stant ! Beautiful place, by the way.
Thank you!
I could listen to this all day! Fascinates me!
Awwwww, it was such a pleasure seeing you in nature with all the sunny weather, little ducks, geese and even frog. Hearing about this interesting "aquatic structure" and childhood memories was heart-warming. Loved your duck-noises 🤣
Grātiās! 🦆 🐸
Wow I loved this video. What a great way to get exposure to the language! Please make more videos like this.
Thanks! I will!
hey luke, really enjoy your videos :)
I noticed some errors in the english subtitles and I don't really know how to post corrections to them without comming off ass rude :( but I will list them below
3:01 "there's my shawod" > "there's my shadow"
3:31 "and thi stream" > "and this stream"
3:37 "flow by my house where is over there" > "flow by my house which is over there"
Strange how simply by talking in Latin it makes me feel how eternal the human experience is...walking by streams, through fields, looking at birds etc
Subtitles are a great addition. Gratias tibi ago.
Amabam hoc. Gracias, Luci.
Surprisingly easy to follow along with what you are saying using the English subtitles. Thank you for a fascinating look at a rural area of Pennsylvania. Brilliant.
Amazing, a nice background, a cool guy in the foreground (😎) and the usual great content found in the video!
Thanks, bro!
Really cool
Thanks
Please continue
It helps learning
What a beautiful canal! Thanks again for all you do!
Thank you, Shelly!
I can not even begin to descrive how much I low Your channel and what You are doing! :)
Thank you!!
Te salvere iubeo e Sveciâ!
Nice place. A relaxing walk.👏😊
Optime. It's easy to understand because everything is right there. (and of course the English is there too :-) Really comprehensible.
I loved this and actually understood a lot of it. I look forward to the next ones. Thanks.
Avis cantat "twīt twīt"
Marcus iratus est!
Marcus avium pulsat!
Eum puer improbus est.
Aemilia : TuxTaxTuxTax
Alors, iste tipo de pellicolle me placet multissimum.. oui je calque d'autres langues just to say, yes these kinds of Latin promenades sont très agréables, fun et pulchre
I have some hope that I did learn some latin in school, because I did partially understand what you were saying. But I still wouldn't know enough to reply.
It was interesting!
i really liked this. even though i only studied about 300 hours of latin 15 years ago, because of the context and the subtitles I was able to tell what was going on. keep up the good work.
Subscribed! Awesome content :D
Thanks!
Wow, so beautiful. I've lived in the south of Washington (state) all my life of 20 years haha, and it was a real treat to see the nature of another side of the country!! Nature here is fairly raw, and wild, and things that have been built are relatively new, so to see relatively old structures like the walls of that canal, is very interesting. I would love to visit one day, I imagine hiking would be not only beautiful but educational for the history of the country/settlements!
Thank you so much for this video! Learning latin is much easier/natural (and beautiful!) with your videos!
I’m glad you liked it, Elizabeth! I think that’s a great suggestion for a future video. I think I’ll go hiking next!
@@ScorpioMartianus I hope you enjoy your future hikes, I know that I will enjoy any video that comes from it ♥️ And if you ever want to hike in the PNW, we locals know the best spots haha!
I really like these going for a walk videos!
Glad you like them!
Pellicula sane utilissima, Luci! Discipulis meis spectandam proponam.
Grātiam tibi referō!
It would probably be impossible to sync up but it would be great to get English and Latin subtexts
Non è un canale UA-cam!È un canale vero!😁👌👍👍
Haha
This was a wonderful video, it reminds me of Magister Craft's videos he makes in his amazing Minecraft world, but in real life! Love it, and I look forward to seeing more!
Magister Craft is the best!
This is fantastic, entertaining and also great as a learning resource - mirrors Arthur Jensen's Nature method almost!
0:18
Nova(m) Caesarea(m)? So is "Jersey" just an anglicized take on "Caesarea" or did is "Caesarea" your Latin take on "Jersey"? Fascinating either way
Yes that’s how the island of Jersey is rendered in Latin
@@ScorpioMartianus
Interesting. What's the etymology behind it? Is it rendered that way for convenience or is there a historical connection between the two names?
A Roman walks into a bar and says Five beers please, and raises two fingers.
Haha that’s very funny 🤣
Perbellē, amice!
Grātiās!
0:18 Nova Caesarea! Ibi habitat mea familia! ...and now I have learned that I've been accenting this name wrong for more than two decades; at college orientation, one of the guides explained the Latin on the university seal and said [nova čeza:rea] and that's what the pronunciation, at least in Ecclesiastical, has been inside my head all this time. :)
Hi Mark! Yeah I used to say it that way too. And the stress accent will of course be the same in all pronunciations. The reason I favor Caesaréa is because of the Greek name
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caesarea
Καισάρεια
Just like Ἀλεξάνδρεια in Latin becomes Alexandrēa, or later 1cBC Alexandrīa, the long vowel in the penultimate syllable necessitates the stress fall there.
But that isn’t to say that imitating the later/Modern Greek accent placement is inherently wrong.
Also, the etymology of the island of Jersey is not clear, and possibly isn’t from Caesar at all.
Still, if I had to give best options, I would recommend Caesarēa or Caesarīa.
Trovo molto bello e divertente il fatto che si siano create delle parole latine per dei termini che i latini non usavano, perché magari non esistevano o non erano conosciute (come il fiume Delaware o il New Jersey)
Infatti questi termini si creano allo stesso tempo che si importano in italiano o in qualsiasi lingua della nostra epoca; io latino si parla senza intervallo ormai 2300 anni. Infatti, moltissimi posti anche nel Mondo Nuovo avevano un nome in latino prima di spagnolo o inglese I francese.
His accent is so nice 😍
Thanks!
Is there a way to convince you to make a Hebrew grammar course with the Ranieri-Dowling Method? (Maybe with Aleph with Bet)
I will definitely consider that!
lol it’s cool to learn latin in a place that i’ve been to many times
fun fact - in ireland spring begins Feb 1
I have a question. As a fellow linguist, I have often wondered if we could transport a Roman soldier into our time and teach him English, what would his accent sound like? I would assume it would sound more Italian like but I'm not sure as I am a student of Old English and know little of Latin or Italian.
So cool!
Thanks!
Greetings from the Illinois Iowa border with the Mississippi River. Come for a visit.
Gladly!
@@ScorpioMartianus Any time. Just trying to learn Latin. Will try to create my own dialog at the bank of the Mississippi. We do get white caps on windy days.
What would Mississippi be in Latin?
I’d spell it the same way.
Hey, can you make a video on your impression and opinion on the Latin course on Duolingo?
I might consider it. But if you want to learn Latin really well use LLPSI. Duolingo is just a stepping stone, in my opinion
@@ScorpioMartianus Well, whenever you got the time to do so.
@@ScorpioMartianus Yeah, I understand that Duolingo is like a beginner, I used it for Italian. Thus, I am considering Latin as well; and other Romance languages. So thank you for the recommendation.
Nova Caiserea? Sounds interesting
I like how the auto generated subtitles are in italian but barely get any words right
Optima pelicula Lucius,
Si is in Italia, silva cum rivo quasi similis adest, sita in Mediolani septentrionali, "Lungo Villoresi" nominata est.
Da mihi veniam, per mea mala scriptura in lingua latina.
Salve, Lucius, quomodo tu habes? (I've just started learning latin so all i know is basic greetings and introductory sentences but im hoping to learn more as i go!)
This is a awesome way to learn if you could fit latin CC would be awesome
It has subtitles
How much are different "fluvius" and "flumen"?
They are synonymous
@@ScorpioMartianus 👌👍
“Nova Caesaria”
I will be calling it that often from now on! ❤😂👍
wanted to do sth like this in parallel English + Russian, but i'm too slow and lazy xD will do one day..
but damn, these videos make me wanna learn Latin. now i'll need to squeeze even more different things into my schedule.
Where that cow bells towards the end?
It was a wind chime on the farmer’s home
@@ScorpioMartianus wow, those must be big wind chimes!
Given the current worldwide goods transportation crisis, perhaps we should start utilizing the canal systems again. We may get things transported more quickly than waiting for a shipping container, a train, a semi or space on an airplane. lol
I live in Saint Louis and the Mississippi River transports thousands of river barges every day
Voluntātem habeō, ut loquī sicut tū poterō.
(I have the wish, that i will be able to speak like you).
If i did some mistakes, someone might want to correct me, because i am learning right now and i am thankful for every advice :)
Ps: i want my latin to be corrected, Not my english haha.
Thanks for your vids
Greatings from germany
You were correct, but it would usually be "volō ut Latīnē loquār sīcut loqueris"
@@Brandon55638 ah i see, thanks !
2:14 Not kidding, that's the first time I hear you speaking English
😃
Bellissime!