Gulielmus Howard Taft (natus Cincinnatopoli in Ohio die 15 Septembris 1857 - Vasingtoniae obiit die 8 Martii 1930) fuit magister iuris apud Universitam Yalensem, vir publicus, vicesimus septimus praesidens Civitatium Foederatarum Americae a die 4 Martii 1909 usque ad diem 4 Martii 1913 et decimus dux Tribunalis Supremi (Anglice Chief Justice) ab anno 1921 usque ad annum 1930.
Melius:
Gulielmus Howard Taft (1857–1930) fuit Praesidens Civitatium Foederatarum Americae et deinde Dux Tribunalis Supremi.
Vita
Taft natus est Cincinnatopoliti die 15 Septembris 1857. Factus est magister iuris apud Universitam Yalensem, vicesimus septimus praesidens Civitatium Foederatarum Americae a die 4 Martii 1909 usque ad diem 4 Martii 1913, et decimus dux Tribunalis Supremi, ab anno 1921 usque ad annum 1930. Obiit Vasingtoniae die 8 Martii 1930.
The suggested form will help a stipula grow. The second paragraph might initially be headed "Vita," and of course it will gain subheadings as the text lengthens. It will grow drastically at the points marked (here for illustration only) by ellipses:
Vita
Taft natus est Cincinnatopoliti die 15 Septembris 1857. . . . Factus est magister iuris apud Universitam Yalensem. . . . Electus est vicesimus septimus praesidens Civitatium Foederatarum Americae . . . a die 4 Martii 1909 usque ad diem 4 Martii 1913. . . . Praefectus est decimus dux Tribunali Supremo . . . . ab anno 1921 usque ad annum 1930. . . . Obiit Vasingtoniae die 8 Martii 1930. . . .
Articles should be set up with a structure designed to grow, what may be described as an open form. The current form of this article—as of many, many, many stipulas (especially biographical ones)—is closed. It will force anyone wanting to expand it to do needless extra work. Stipulas, obviously, are acknowledged by their authors to be incomplete: they shouldn't be designed so as to impede their expansion. The form I've suggested above is more amenable to growth. IacobusAmor17:42, 16 Octobris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
It seems our persistent Nebrasca vandal is making a point continuing to inflict himself upon us. See Lingua Escimona and Butyrumalia. It is amazing how much energy this creature has. Too bad he is incapable of directing the energy to creating rather than destroying.--Rafaelgarcia01:30, 24 Octobris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Hi, just a question, i know we are calling our category system categoria, i think this is most Italianic, in Latin this would be Categoriae, just a thought??, Hendricus20:52, 28 Octobris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I mean Latin isn't always the same as Italian, i tought that category (eng) is categoria (Italian) and categoriae in Latin ( singular = categoriae > multiple = categorium ) or not ?? Hendricus21:43, 28 Octobris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Certainly Latin is not always the same as Italian...but in Latin the word is feminine and singular and categoria. Categorium would be a weird syncopated genitive plural (I've certainly never seen the word). Further, no word in the whole language (watch Muke or Iustinus or Fabullus or Neander or Iacobus come prove me wrong) that has its singular form terminate in ~ae. Don't really know where you got that, Hendrice.--Ioscius(disp)22:35, 28 Octobris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
In manu scriptis musicae medievalis et eorum editionibus modernis, saepe invenitur verbum Euouae, quod consistit in vocalibus verborum "[in secula] seculorum. Amen." !!! IacobusAmor04:36, 29 Octobris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I've done the first sentence for E. gran. All the medical terms are a pain in translation, though. Words like proglottid make me want to currere ad murum testaceum. Harrissimo.
Ah, now I see: Cestoda is a class and therefore plural, and Cyclophyllidea is also plural, so I've changed the phrase to cestodorum cyclophyllideum 'a cyclophyllid of the cestods', which seems to be what it's trying to say; of course biologists may have a better formula for it. IacobusAmor03:40, 30 Octobris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Please see Disputatio:Mancunienses Uniti. I don't know whether we should be translating football club names. Should we use the names of the imhabitants of the city then urbs or uniti afterwards? Should we use the city names with SP after them? Should we just keep them how they are in their native languages? Harrissimo.
I am arch-conservative on this. I don't think we should translate the names of organizations, unless someone has already given them a Latin name. But I think most others disagree with me ... Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 13:09, 31 Octobris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
OK. The only two clubs likely to have sources are Mancunienses Uniti and Armorum Fabricatores (Arsenal). How should we handle the "thereafter referenced" names? (like urbs and uniti? I think we need a single method and club names from across different sports are springing up all over the place at the moment). Should we make something on TNP? Harrissimo.
Fairy stories
Cinderella is maybe our first article about a fairy story.
I don't know if we have any reason to choose the young lady's English name for our heading, rather, than, say, her French, Italian or Spanish names. (I don't suggest German, because Aschenputtel doesn't fit very nicely into Latin.) Any views?
1In Spanish it is Cenicienta which I do not know how to translate properly, but ceniza is "ash" and -enta is and adjectivation coming from the Latin -ns (it would be something like covered in ashes or ashe-coloured).¶2 On this thing, fabulae is in my opinion too wide, despite the fact that fabula in spanish has a very precise meaning--Xaverius13:16, 31 Octobris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Re categories: you might consider if the proposed category is for European stories only, or whether it includes folktales from, say, indigenous peoples of Brazil. Do our German friends include non-European tales among the canonical Märchen? IacobusAmor13:39, 31 Octobris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
For "spy" I find "speculator" (probably the etymological origin), but this might be more military reconnaisance. "Agens in rebus" was, I think, secret police. --Alex101113:53, 31 Octobris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
One of my old dictionaries (Ainsworth's) offers: speculator, explorator, Corycaeus, custos, *catascopus. It has this model attestation: Speculandi causa missus erat in Ciliciam 'He was sent as a spy into Cilicia'. Another (White's) has the first two and adds that speculator was used by both Cicero & Caesar, and explorator by Caesar. IacobusAmor13:55, 31 Octobris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Yeah, even the back of the CLC lists scout first. It seems to be inferior to emissarius. Nevertheless, it's probably what a Roman would have said and most dictionaries seem to prefer this and speculator. If we look into the verbs which are the basis for their formation, speculor: watch, observe, spy out, examine, explore and exploro: search out, explore, test, try out, reconnoiter, investigate. Emissarius looks more suitable but maybe less classical. Harrissimo.
Undoubtedly, someone will prove me wrong about the last bit ;) Harrissimo.
Spy. Etymology: Middle English spien, from Anglo-French espier, of Germanic origin; akin to Old High German spehōn to spy; akin to Latin specere to look, look at, Greek skeptesthai & akopein to watch, look at, consider Date: 13th century.-Iosifer
Amici amicaeque mei (meaeque)! Tempus est!
Cras est butyrumalia! That's right everyone! The traditional Eskimo butter festival (see butyrum, butyrumalia, et nebrasca for details)is tomorrow, November 1st! Prepare the butter statues of your ancestors, and make the customary sacrifices to your household deities to ensure a plentiful butter harvest in the year to come. There will be horse-racing, discus-throwing, and whale-fighting in the arena near you! Refreshments will not be served, so BYOB (bring your own butter.)
Cuando traduciendo de un idioma a otro, es muy util poder communicarse en ambos o mutiples idiomas. El latin tambien es especial porque ya no hay nadie que lo hable como lengua nativa. Ya que a mayoria de nosotros entendemos el ingles, ya que se convertido casi lengua internacional, por eso solemos communicar en ingles tanto como en latin. Pero si no entiendes bien el ingles scribe en latin o espanol y te entederemos. Salve --Rafaelgarcia15:03, 1 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I would go for "grex musica popularis" or "grex musica pop" ("popularis" is a bit confusing because it might might mean in this case that they are a popular music band rather than a band that sings pop music, and pop music and music that is popular are not exactly the same thing) -Kedemus 07:15, 15 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
As usual, Kedemus proposes something undeclinable. Let's stick with the declinable adjectives, I'm sure we can find ways to make its use unambiguous.--Ioscius(disp)15:20, 15 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Ut bene Ioscius dicit, adverbia non sunt praepositiones; substantiva non afficiunt, sed verba. Exempli gratia considera adverbium bene: Bene homo dicit; Homo bene sententiam dicit; Bene homo sententiam dicit. In ea sententia bene solum verbum dicit afficit.
In mensa, podium ligneo factum parvum instruitur; or equivalently, if you don't want to emphasize "upon the table", Podium ligneo factum parvum mensa instruitur.--Rafaelgarcia16:35, 6 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Which is your adverb? Upon is a preposition, corresponding to "in" in the Latin translation. Yes, prepositions have to be followed by a noun in a particular case. Which case? It varies with the preposition. You need to check in a dictionary. In takes the ablative when it means "in/on"; it takes the accusative when it means "into, on to". Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 16:47, 6 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Nomen lectorinum, quod secundae declinationis esse videtur, diminutive fit lectorinulum (sine 'c'), aut fortasse lectorillum (vide hic. Terminatio -culum pertinet ad nomina tertiae, quartae et quintae declinationis (vide hic). --Fabullus09:10, 15 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Hmmm, not quite, Harri. Super is like sub in that, when accusative, they imply motion. Super lunam bos salit means that the cow jumped over the moon (and landed/kept going on the other side). However, when ablative, they imply static (or at least not transient motion). Bombus super scruto volat means that the bee was flying over (the top of) the trash. So he could use super here with ablative, but not accusative. Etiam, mea quidem sententia, "in" melius sit. --Ioscius(disp)16:55, 6 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
"Podium ligneo factum parvum mensa instruitur" "ligneo" è un aggettivo e qui era necessario un sostantivo "ligno". "Parvo ligneo podio mensa instruitur" mi sembrerebbe la migliore. Lio da Pisa.13 Januarii 2008
Fuit error typographicus; Legatur correcte "podium ligno factum" = "podium ligneum"; Sed mea sententia rectior fuisset "Lectorinum ligneum".--Rafaelgarcia03:23, 13 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Nova verbae
Are there official latin words for things such as potato, bicycle or lightbulb, or do people just randomly make them up? How do you know which words to use??????
maybe someone could make an official list on Vicipaedia one day Usor:Kai_su_teknon
Of words? This why people like Traupman and the catholics write conversational latin books. There's also several on the internet. Maybe you'd like to see the links which another user asked to some dictionaries of such words. Harrissimo.
What you mean by "official"? There is no Royal Academy of Latin, just latin dictionaries, glossaries, and what is gotten by reading the literature. I would recommend the sources Harrissimo mentions, especially Traupman's conversational latin book for modern things.--Rafaelgarcia18:16, 6 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Also, re potato. A potato is a living thing. All identified living things—plants & animals—have official Latin names, given to them by highly qualified scientists. (In fact, to be scientifically recognized, almost every species needs a Latin name and a full scientific description published in Latin.) Several million such names are known and available. Unfortunately for those who like lists to be complete, microbiologists in the past few years have begun to understand that there are probably many hundreds of millions of species of unidentified microbes. IacobusAmor18:19, 6 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
The enwiki article Hadrian's Wall has the following section in it:
RIGORE seems to be the ablative form of the Latin word rigor. This can mean several things, but one of its less-known meanings is ‘straight line’, ‘course’ or ‘direction’.
Many Thanks. Tivedshambo 19:16, 9 Novembris 2007 (UTC)
Error in pagina prima
Error in pagina prima sub pictura de Polynesiis navigantibus scriptus: muta "ca. anno 1781" ad "ca. annum 1781"; et "deus ...timebant" ad "deum...timebant."-anon
New formula
I made a formula {{Pars vicificanda}} to place on an otherwise good page where some new text has been added that needs vicifying and maybe Latinizing. I needed it for Ramayana but I think it will be useful elsewhere.
I copy here what I've just written on Hendricus' discussion page:
Dear Hendricus, first I wish to thank you for your incredible work.
I understand and share your target to enrich la.wiki, but the opening of a lot of untranslating pages doesn't make sense. The users of la.wiki are actually very few and we can't translate a lot of new pages. Therefore I beg you please to insert already in Latin at least the name, birth and death dates and activity of the person. If you desire to suggest new pages, you can rather use the taberna page. Thank you and ciao--Massimo Macconi07:30, 11 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Hmmm. Que es la frase entera? "enmarcar un foto" es "in forma includere", por tanto el participio es "in forma incluso/a/um". ¿Ti ayuda este? --Ioscius(disp)13:16, 12 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Es ésta: El lienzo del Señor de los Milagros se ubica sobre el eje transversal del anda. El lienzo, en cuya parte posterior se ubica el de Nuestra Señora de la Nube, está encuadrado por un doble marco de columnas salomónicas que rematan en capiteles a modo de querubines, sobre los que se apoya un arco ornamentado con especies de volutas y rostros de ángeles.--Le K-li14:37, 12 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Mi diccionario (Spes vox latina latino-español/español-latino) da forma, -ae para marco. Lo malo es que los romanos no usaban marcos y no tenian cuadros, así que creo que a no ser que haya una palabra tardía, enmarcado sería en mi opinión, algún derivado de pictus in forma positus/collocatus, pero yo no soy quien, aquí hay gente que sabe muuuucho más que yo...--Xaverius16:11, 12 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Pour mon part, j'ai toujours vu le nom "Parisius" en forme pluriel, c'est à dire "Parisii" (Parisiis publice iure factus etc.). Je crois que celà remonte à la "Lutetia Parisorum," qu'on ait abbéviée à "Parisii" (pluriel). Alors moi je dirais que le nom contemporait devrait être "Parisii" (dont le locative "Parisiis"). -Jackmitchell 19:43, 13 Novembris 2007 (UTC) {I am copying this to Disputatio:Lutetia: hope that's OK. Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 21:11, 13 Novembris 2007 (UTC))[reply]
Categories for biologists
Hendricus has been asking me about building a category structure for the biologist articles he is adding. If anyone wants to comment -- or to disagree with me! -- our discussion is on my disputatio page. Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 19:27, 13 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Praesens perfectus continuus
Quomodo possum verba in "present perfect continuous" transferre??? Exempli gratia: Quid est latina forma huius sententiae "I've been living in Rome for 3 years"? Gratias plurimas vobis ago! Equula
Tantum? Putavi esse quid difficilius! Gratias tibi ago.Equula
Per tres annos Romae vixi. Id puto, quia "habito" tempus praesens est nec minime tempus praeteritum indicat.Lio
"Tres annos Romae vixi" = "I was alive in Rome three years (and no longer live there)"; "Tres annos Romae vivo" = "I have been alive in Rome three years (and continue to live there)". "Per" in "Per tres annos" = "through three years" Latine est forma prava.--Rafaelgarcia03:35, 13 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Hi to all. i've managed to copypaste some templates from the English wiki to create geographical coordinates in articles (see: Promontorium Paeninsulae Eboraci), there are some red linked templates left in the structure, and the templates should be protected by administrators, for now the coordinates are workable at the articles, so maybe an administrator can look into this and get a finnishing touch, Hendricus20:57, 13 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Just for my info, what does this command, when placed between curly brackets, do? Anonymous 84.55.6.110 has inserted it into a couple of files. IacobusAmor14:37, 15 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Aliquid scribere de Carbohydrates, proteins and lipids velim, sed nescio quales sunt latinae formae horum verborum. Nescio quidem si similes nexus iam sunt quia translationem ignoro. Quid est mihi faciendum? Potestis nonne mihi auxilio esse ? Equula
¿Alguien sabe cómo se dice corbata en latín?/Does anybody know how to say necktie in Latin?/Est-ce qu'il y a quelqu'un(e) qui sais comment dire cravate en latin?
Focale -is is a scarf according to Morgan, also termed fascia collaris, while neck-tie is fascia Croatica or just fascia for short, attested as coming from LRL. --Rafaelgarcia15:30, 17 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
White's dictionary defines English 'cravat' as focale. Ainsworth's defines one focale as "A muffler, to keep the throat and neck warm, Mart. Quint." and another focale as "A garment worn by the fire-side, Sen." Among the senses of fascia, Ainsworth's includes (I condense the entry): "1. a swathe, band, or roller, used by the ancients on their thighs and legs, instead of breeches; 2 a bandage for wounds or broken limbs; 3 a cloud; 4 a wreath about the top of a pillar; 5 a diadem; 6 a stomacher, or breast-cloth, a child's bib, a scarf." ¶ Ainsworth's welter of senses of fascia show no obligatory association with the neck, whereas focale does show an attested association with the neck. Also, for fascia, the sense of 'scarf' is the last one listed (and presumably then the least particularly relevant one). Therefore, for 'necktie', focale seems the likelier bet. IacobusAmor15:52, 17 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Academic Degree
Please see this. Also, I thought it best to follow the example of Universitas Harvardiana and use "graduandus" for "undergraduate" and "graduatus" for "graduate". Just to be complicated, you can do an undergraduate master's degree at Oxford and a graduate bachelor's degree. O di immortales! Leigh(disp)21:40, 21 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Does anybody know what this might be the abbreviation for? I see it in Morgan a lot and look forward to citing it in some of our country pages. Harrissimo19:15, 22 Novembris 2007 (UTC).[reply]
I have responded on your page, Harri, but the Cliff notes are:
Theatrum Botanicum (1640) – this is currently rendered as The Botanical Theatre, but one source has Theatre of Plants instead. Which translation is better?
Hi, I'd be grateful if someone would provide English translations of the following additional Latin book titles (and imprint information, where necessary) that appear in the article "John Parkinson (botanist)" over at en.wikipedia:
Medicorum Collegij Londinensis [Royal College of Physicians of London] (1618). Pharmacopœia Londinensis in qua medicamenta antiqua et nova vsitatissima, sedulò collecta, accuratissimè examinata, quotidiana experientia confirmata describuntur. Opera Medicorum Collegij Londinensis. Ex serenissimi Regis mandato cum R.M. Priuilegio. London: Printed by Edwardus [Edward] Griffin for Iohannis [John] Marriot, ad insigne iridis albæ in platea vulgò dicta Fleet-street.
This is off the top of my head, others will want to give their input: "London pharmacopia in which are described the most useful old and new drugs, diligently collected, very accurately examined, confirmed by daily experience. Work of the London College of Doctors. By the mandate of the very serene King with R.M. (?) privilege. London...Marriot, at the sign of the white iris in the square commonly called Fleet-street." 71.208.202.37 05:18, 3 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
van de Passe, Crispijn [the Elder] (1614[–1617]). Hortus floridus in quo rariorum & minus vulgarium florum icones ad vivam varamq[ue] formam accuratissime delineatae et secundum quatuor anni tempora divisae exhibentur incredibili labore ac diligentia Crisp. Passaei junioris delineatae ac suum in ordinem redactae. Arnheimij [Arnhem]: Ioannem Ianssonium [?Jan Janszoon the Elder].
Again, this is a first effort to which others may respond: "Floral garden in which are exhibited images of rather rare and less common flowers, in living and bent [? or "veram" = "true" or "variam" =" various"] form, delineated very accurately and divided according to the four seasons of the year, [exhibited] by the unbelievable labor and diligence of Crispus (?) Passaeus the younger, delineated and brought back into their own order."71.208.202.37 05:18, 3 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
"Res amoris gestae"? Is it not clear to you how silly this phrase is? It seems as though many of you need to go back to your Caesar, your Livy, your Cicero so that you can remind yourselves of what Latin looks like. Perhaps take a cruise through Bradley's Arnold. Is it not apparent that creating an encyclopaedia in this language is a fool’s errand? intellectual masturbation? Do you not understand that there is a difference between Latinitas and felicitas? Articles on Green Day and Eskimo kisses lack both. Do you understand that keeping a not very funny article on canned ham for months while deleting immediately anything on the Nebraska Eskimos is rank hypocrisy? Escimonicorum Magister Osculorum17:31, 24 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I agree with you Jeff, there is often a lack of both felicitas and Latinitas apud nos. That's why we don't need blatant vandalism. You're right about the canned pork, too, and I would have deleted that if I had seen it before. I also agree with you that res amoris gestae is pretty poor. I don't know why any of this encourages you to write nonsense, instead of trying to help in a serious manner?
As for intellectual masturbation, I leave you with two quotes:
Don't knock masturbation; it's sex with someone I love.--Woody Allen
Give me rampant intellectualism as a coping mechanism.--Chuck Palahniuk
I agree with the magister too. I die every time I see that awful yellow {{Iocus}}. And I say this although I have spent some of my life (from long before Wikipedia was a twinkle in Wales's eye) writing reference books that, incidentally, just now and then, make people laugh. Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 21:56, 24 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
But in your pontification you have made a logical leap, O magister, and stumbled on landing. Is it not apparent that creating an encyclopaedia in this language is a fool’s errand? No, it isn't. The fact that we haven't yet done it well enough doesn't mean that it can't be done. Rolandus (who hasn't been around recently, I'm sorry to say) wrote to me that he thought we might get there in about 50 years. Compared with the gestation period of the Oxford English Dictionary that's a respectable timetable. Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 10:27, 25 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Hi Everyone, I apologize to those in the academe and others who are horrified with my latin but I'm working hard to improve and would like to enlist your aid. I'm working hard to read Cicero and other classics. Below is my attempt(please feel free to correct all or any) and request-Jondel;
Salve omnes! Quaeso si ille vobis placet mihi adiuvare quam sum tironis latine et maxime studeo ne deleat res dziipni. Adeo rectificationem feci et prebeo sequens(quid putatis?? ):
'Dziipni, est modus popularus conmunis vecturae Philippinis et passim videtur.
The jeepney is a popular means of transportation in the Philippines and is ubiquitous. How is this?
'Dziipni, est facultus popularus conmunis vecturarum Philippinis et passim videtur.
Why the double ii? If long i just draw a line over it once to let people know how to pronounce it.
Here is my version of how the article should start:
Jeepey (in phillipino: Jeepey) is a kind of bus that is seen everywhere in the Phillipines.
In principio facturii exercitio Americanis militaribus relictus ex Bellico Mundo Secundo.
At first they were manufactured by the American forces that were left behind from world war 2. How is this? :changing to this=>ab exercitibus Americanis relictis(plural ablative) Thus:
In principio sunt facturii "ab" exercitibus Americanis militaribus "quae" relictis ex Bello Terraro Secundo.
Is this better: 'Dziipni, est modus popularus conmunis vecturae Philippinis et passim videntur.
These buses at first where manufactured out of vehicles left by the American army after World War II.
Clarus est decoraminium gaudiorum et densitatis convectoris.
It is well known for its guady decorations and being crowded with passengers. Is this better?: Notus est proptere quod est decoravus gaudium et densitatis convectorum.
Rafael, gratias ago. Thank you very much, I will be using all your corrections. However, its Jeepney not Jeepey. Also I would like to add the idea that it is a transportation that the common man (plebians) use . , So I will probably add 'est facultas frequens plebonorum et..." . Denueno , thanks again.--124.83.58.69 13:10, 26 Novembris 2007 (UTC) --Jondel13:38, 26 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Jondel, Are you using a dictionary? plebonorum? A crowded means of plebians? how exactly do you associate facultas with transportation?? or take plebs to be a second declension noun? But even if you mistook it for a 2nd declension it wouldn't be right--where did the -on- come from?.--Rafaelgarcia13:23, 26 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Uh sorry, the online notre dame was offline a while ago. The idea I would to express is :J... is a popular means/way of commuting/traveling "of" the lower income bracket people(majority). The 'on' was supposed to be a plural genitive tack-on (to mean "of") . The online notre dame dictionary is on now.facultas was meant to be 'means of' or 'way of'. Maybe I should use plebis? How's this? Dzipni est modus popularis convecturi(convecturae?) pro plebe. Is 'plebe' derogative? Hmm--Jondel13:38, 26 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
There is no such tack-on in latin. Where did you get that? If you can't avail yourself of that one dictionary, then you should try to use some other ones on the internet like Words. If you want help, then you should at least show that you're doing your part, right? I would write modus vectoralis apud plebes popularis and yes plebes is derogatory but only in the same limited sense as common is in english. Regardless, I think you are misguided in your facts, for based onthe english wiki the Jeepney's are more expensive to ride than a regular airconditioned bus.--Rafaelgarcia17:23, 26 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
For the record, I'm pretty sure Wordsis the "online Notre Dame" to which Jondel is referring. For the record, again, Jondel, this program is downloadable to your computer. I used it for years online, cursing it whenever it was down (which is all the freaking time, but it's still better than Perseus!!!). Then I downloaded it (it's a tiny little file) and it's been groovy since. I actually have to confess I downloaded it on all my friends' computers, too =] Wherever I go I can use Words!--Ioscius(disp)21:08, 26 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Rereading my comments I see myself coming off as haughty when I didn't mean to. We all make mistakes after all. Sometimes the simple things go right past me. I'm not trying to discourage anyone from pitching in to the best of their ability. We don't have enough editors as is. :) In fact, it is interesting reading about Jeepneys, although it would have been nicer and more fun learning about them in latin.--Rafaelgarcia20:41, 26 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
The double i in dziipni was because I wanted to spell Jeepney as Dyipni. The y being represented by i=> double i. But I think dzipni is just fine. I will move the whole page to dzipni.
Jeeps by the way are cheaper than busses. I know because I live here now in Manila.Minimum jeep fare is now is 7.5 pesos. While buses are at 9 pesos.
Again I am a beginner and I don't pretend to be an expert. The reason for this article correction request is to fulfill a requirement so that the article will not be deleted. Well, thats all. I'll be making a copy of this dicussion onto the discussion page of the dzipni page.
Anyone can delete your userpage, but I don't think we can delete your account. I certainly can't, at least. Your name will still appear in article histories. Adam Episcopus15:14, 25 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks very much, Harrissimo! ;) Now I've requested my discussion page deletion too. Thanks, Adam :)
User accounts cannot be deleted, but bureaucrats can rename users (which will also affect the author which is given in page histories, but which will not affect the content of pages, e. g. past signatures on talk pages). --UV19:24, 25 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you. Do you know, BTW, why these external links keep making 3 or 4 spaces between them and the next piece of writing? Maybe it is just my browser. Harrissimo19:26, 25 Novembris 2007 (UTC).[reply]
Your browser should show a small graphical arrow to the right of an external link, hence the spacing. Maybe you switched off the display of graphics in your browser? If this is not the cause, you might try to clear your browser's cache. --UV00:05, 27 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Reditus Spiculorum
Two words in my Spiculorum ludus page are bothering me. Does anyone know how to say "clockwise" and "to score a point"? (as in 'the player scored 130 points'). Harrissimo17:45, 25 Novembris 2007 (UTC).[reply]
Circum horologium would be my best guess for the former. Backpedaling from Italian we might go with sensu horario. I know I've struggled with the second question before, but I can't for the life of me rememebr where or what my final verdict was . . . --Ioscius(disp)20:36, 25 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
nescio num hanc rem tractare debeam Latine an Anglice. aliquot versiones vel potius sententias versas iam conscripsi in variis paginis Googlis sed plus quam aliquantulum displicet modus operandi ibi quod difficile est conferre mea verba cum versionibus iam confectis (et quod saepe non apparent versiones). quae est historia versionis Mediaviciae. quinam impetraverunt et quomodo. cur exempli gratia utimur hic verbo "convento" pro "login/account"? in eo est ut forsan versiones scribam pro programate "Moodle" sed hodie legebam sententias Anglicas et timeo ne horribiliter Latine vertam. estne umquam documentum de electionibus iam factis hic et cum disputationibus participum? --Andreas03:49, 26 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Andreae, nescio quapropter in Vicipaedia "login/account" dicitur "convento" nec ubi est pagina disputationis de hoc. Possumus mea sententia disputare hic. Mihi videtur nomen "sessio" melius fuisse.--Rafaelgarcia04:22, 26 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
estne umquam sub umbella "Vicimediae" locus idoneus quo ponamus textus ipsos Latinos sicut inventos sub thelatinlibrary.com? mihi videtur necesse nobis habere corpus quod recensere et polire possimus. --Andreas03:56, 26 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
It's called the Platea Sancti Petri according to the italian wiki page it:Piazza San Pietro. Platea means wide street or avenue. I would have thought Forum was better. Our own latin page calls it Forum Sancto Petro, but I think that must be wrong. --Rafaelgarcia17:46, 27 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Actually my goof. It actually says Forum Sancto Petro dicatum->Forum dedicated to St. Peter which is correct. In my eagerness to find a gloss of the name, I missed the dicatum!--Rafaelgarcia18:52, 27 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
One of us had a page of all military titles in Latin and other languages. But this page seems to have gone or is not any more accessible. I thought of optio. --Alex101119:08, 29 Novembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
PS: Are you sure about postimpulsus vel postvexatio? I mean, aftershock is how we call the earthquakes following a higher-inrensity earthquake, right?
I just made a suggestion based on a direct translation. Even in english aftershock has many possible meanings not just an earthquake that follows a main earthquake. If you want a totally unambigous phrase then you can use something like: terrae motus parviores qui saepe terrae motum principalem sequuntur. --Rafaelgarcia00:02, 1 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I'd try motus recidivus or motus secundarius. For example: In sismologia, motus recidivus est terrae motus qui post motum maiorem eodem loco minore vi accidit. --Neander00:25, 1 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Alright, I've been up and down the internet and can't find anything on this, so could any of you be of any help? How does one pronounce modern dates in latin? Here's an example and the specific problems.
Marx Augustae Treverorum die 5 Maii 1818 natus est.
Do I simply say day 5, i.e. die quinque, or do I say the fifth day and if so, which case? Is die masculine or feminine in this context? The same goes for the year. How does one pronounce 1818? What case is it? Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Good question. If we don't have a page explaining this (maybe we do somewhere ...) we need one. I think the answer is this.
The proper way for dates in the year is this. Die is ablative, meaning "on the ... day". The number should be read as an ordinal in the ablative to match, thus quinto (fifth) or vigesimo quinto (25th). The month is then in the genitive, meaning "... of May".
A year, immediately following such a date, would be "anni 1818" (but we usually don't bother to write the "anni") and that should all be read as an ordinal numeral in the genitive. As with any foreign language, this wants a lot of practice to get it fluent!
A year on its own (without day and month) will often be preceded by "anno" in the ablative, meaning "in the ... year", and, if you want to do it right, it should be read as an ordinal numeral in the ablative. Again, keep practising ... Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 11:04, 2 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Cur Vicipaedia computatione Julii non utitur? e.g. "die quinto Maii anno 1818" esse debet "a. d. III Non. Maii, MMDLXXII," (Roma condita anno DLIII ante Cristo) aut aliquid similis. Nollo offendere, tamen curiosus sum. Etiam, meam mediocrem Latinam ignoscatis, amabo te. Non optimus discipulus sum, et usum de Latina lingua requiro. -- Nemo Singularis
Quod prima versio est moderna atque simplicius atque nobis magis intelligibilis. Hic in Vicipaedia utimur omnibus ingressis scientificis, numeris arabicis inclusis et systematis modernis. Non est nostrum propositum recreare hic mundum Caesaris historiam humanam ignorando.--Rafaelgarcia05:55, 14 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Video. Illud rationum videtur. Tibi gratias ago. Atque deis immortalis gratias ago quod linguam Anglicam et non mathematicam (aut linguas antiquas) studeo. Cum aetatem Romae computabam, ducenta ommisi! --Nemo Occidaneus (Singularis)
Bene...Sed cave quod studeo non significat study sed I am eager; study~disco, discere; vel etiam studeo+ablativo->I am eager with/for~I study+something. Vale--Rafaelgarcia00:31, 15 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Viceregnum vel vicerregnum?
Hi!
I've got a doubt. I found the article viceregnum Peruvianum, but I think that the word viceregnum should be written with a double "r" - this way: vicerregnum -, because of the pronunciation. Unless the Latin "r" is always pronounced in the same way, I think that the pronunciation changes from a strong "r" (in regnum) to a softer "r" (in viceregnum).--Le K-li02:22, 3 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I agree with Alex. If there was any shift in pronunciation of intial r when such compounds were formed -- and no one can really know whether there was or not -- at any rate no change was reflected in the spelling. Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 10:18, 3 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I know I'm a bit tiring on this... but nw it seems that we have more and more Latin students joining (Usor:Latinology, usor:Kerrysheehy, usor:Magistertatnall; cf Disputatio:Schola Tatnall) we should really start our porta eruditionis. What Iacobus has been doing today could be a way of dealing with this matter. And what about a template going beyond {{tiro}}? We could ask these students to write their pages in the porta eruditionis and everybody could helo there, because if they create the pages, they might go unnoticed... Well, just a thought...--Xaverius18:42, 3 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
No, Xavi, you're absolutely right. I've been meaning to get off my ass and do something about this. December 19th is my last day, and I will have all of January for Vici. I promise to focus efforts on the Porta primarily.--Ioscius(disp)18:59, 3 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I think the idea of putting the beginners' pages within the Porta Eruditionis is a very good one. Can they be made sub-pages of the porta, e.g. Vicipaedia:Porta eruditionis/Cinerella? Would that work? A template like {{Tiro}}, with a date limit, meaning "Please let me work on this page until xxx date", might also be a good idea. Then, when the date is passed, we can upgrade and transfer the page if we want. Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 21:45, 3 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Or even Vicipaedia:Porta eruditionis/Scriptorium/Cinerella so that we can have a list of subpages pages at the scriptorium? After the students' short reapperance today, I think for reason that the pages should be deleted due to our policies (poor latinity, not enough content, need vicification) I am going to move them to a scriptorium where they can be improved over time (these students only appear now and again). Any objections? To the word Scriptorium? To the idea? Harrissimo17:44, 8 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC).[reply]
The pages would be automatically linked up to this introduction on page Vicipaedia:Scriptorium. Now there is a link from Vicipaedia:Porta eruditionis/Scriptorium/Cinerella directly to Vicipaedia:Porta eruditionis and the Scriptorium-subpage will be skiped (it seems that pages shall not have more than one level of subpages).
Sorry for not seeing this sooner :S. The Idea of it being in the (longer to type) Porta Eruditionis is that it is for students to make rather than having an {{In progressu}}Nomen formulae mutavit --Grufo {{In usu}} up for months (or as I mentioned above, poor latinity, not enough content, need vicification). I say that because somebody who is more adept at latin can have an in progressuNomen formulae mutavit --Grufoin usu on a normal page for a few weeks (as long as they keep going with it), but these students' sometimes un-vicipaedic work needs to stay somewhere. I could make a compendium (VP:PE/S) so it is easier to access or even make a Vicipaedia:Scriptorium as a redirect. I have completed an introduction and have put on links. What do you mean about the subpages being skipped? Harrissimo22:01, 8 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC).[reply]
It seems that the existance of page Vicipaedia:Porta eruditionis/Scriptorium makes it work. Now there are two links to parent pages provided in the top left corner of the page: "< Vicipaedia:Porta eruditionis | Scriptorium". Before just this was provided: "< Vicipaedia:Porta eruditionis". --Rolandus21:00, 11 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Mea sententia scripturus erat Latine, sed etiam hic illic cum exemplis in aliis linguis, exempli gratia quomodo iam facimus in paginis de Latinitate, fortasse cum dropdown menus in variis linguis. Quomodo dicitur dropdown menu Latine?--Rafaelgarcia22:47, 3 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Well, then it seems that the Porta Eruditionis should be in our new year resolutions. And when I finish the term, I will try to help more around here... I have been rather busy and left vici aside... sorry!--Xaverius11:09, 5 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Attestation City!
Today's New York Times has an article that publishes attestations of the following names:
Alfredus Maximus 'Alfred the Great'
Georgius Bushus Senior 'George Bush Senior'
Hillaria Clintona 'Hillary Clinton'
Williamus Clintonus 'Bill Clinton'
Jacobus Garfieldus 'James Garfield'
Rudius Giulianus 'Rudy Giulani'
Alanus Hollinghurstus 'Alan Hollinghurst'
Thomas Jeffersonus 'Thomas Jefferson'
Nixonus 'Nixon'
Barackus Obamus 'Barack Obama'
Jacobus Polkus 'James Polk'
Academia Philliporum 'Phillips Academy'
Eduardus Rooseveltus 'Edward [sic] Roosevelt'
Conlegium Williami Mariaeque 'The College of William and Mary'
Episcopi Loughlin Memor Schola Alta [?] 'Bishop Loughlin Memorial High School'
Fontium Caldorum Schola Aqua [sic!] 'Hot Springs High School'
Hiram Conlegium 'Hiram College'
Patres Fundantes 'The Founding Fathers'
Virginiae Universitatis 'The University of Virginia'
It also provides an attestation for 'docere' = 'to learn' ("Jeffersonus, novem annos natus, linguas Latinam et Graecam ad scholam in Virginia pontifice Caledonio administratam docere coepit." = "Jefferson started learning Latin and Greek at age 9 at a school in Virginia run by a Scottish clergyman."). 128.138.64.185 23:25, 3 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Eduardus Rooseveltus is used for 'Teddy Roosevelt.' ("Teddy Roosevelt studied classics at Harvard." = "Eduardus Rooseveltus aeterna Harvardi didicit.") 128.138.64.185 23:35, 3 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Any credence for this attestions is in my opinion undermined by the fact that he uses 'studere' instead of 'discere' for 'to study,learn'. And 'docere' means 'to teach' not 'to learn'. His level of latinitas is dubium.--Rafaelgarcia00:32, 4 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
And by what logic, Jeffersonus Clintonus but yet Hillaria Clintona, since when do surnames change with the gender of the person. Would Caesar's daughter have been Caesarea and not Caesar? Should my name be Garcius? And what's with the use of lengthy Roman numerals--shouldn't latins avail themselves of advances in science? Don't get me wrong, he makes a good point about studying latin and roman history. A point that needs to be made now more than ever. However, as a source he is untrustworthy.--Rafaelgarcia00:41, 4 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I know, I know, and the first sentence (Primum, duces nostros linguam Latinam non iam studere triste non videtur) even uses the rare (or "wrong"?) studeo + acc. instead of + gen. or dat. But the point is that the New York Times is a well-known & reputable publication, and those are therefore attestations, whether we like them or not (and for the most part, I don't). If we're going to remorphologize Obama, there's no reason why it can't be Obama, -ae, m., and accordingly no need to make it Obamus, -i, m. And if we're going to treat the English suffix -ey as Latin -eia, then we might as well go with Sydneia instead of whatever we now use (and I seldom remember)—and likewise, Britneia (as in Spears). Aiieee! O aqualem vermium! IacobusAmor04:43, 4 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
It's a publication, but it isn't known as a reliable source of Latin. In any case, many of our "reliable sources" differ among themselves. I think wise Vicipaediani will adopt the NYT's attestations when really convincing. When they are not convincing, the most we should do is to footnote them -- without adopting them. Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 10:21, 4 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
To answer Rafael above, in some languages that have both declension and gender, surnames do regularly change with the gender of the person. In modern Greek, for example. And modern Greek resembles Latin in this. Hence, in Latin, we get Iulius/Iulia, Clodius/Clodia (which are nomina); or Marcellus/Marcella (which is a cognomen). Curiously, if we rely on usual sources, Roman women did not have or use forenames! Their names as known to us are nearly always based on nomina and/or cognomina, i.e. on surnames. Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 10:21, 4 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I would think that in a modern context, the husbands name would be in the genitive Hillary Rodam of Clinton->Hillaria Rodama Clintoni (following the pattern of the NYT article of translating all the names, not the Vicpaedia standard).--Rafaelgarcia13:30, 4 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
This guy just wrote a book called Carpe Diem: Put a Little Latin in Your Life discussing the ways in which Latin has crept into normal parlance, with rudimentary grammar. He follows the same conventions, annoyingly, in his book. The final straw was Tomassus Crusius, I almost threw up. I have some praise for the book, some of it is endearing, and the stories he tells about Latin in his own experience and in the experience of others is valuable. But I don't like his Latin.--Ioscius(disp)17:58, 4 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
primus minister VS. minister primarius
Hi all. Sorry if this is an oldie, but there seems to be no consensus on "primus minister" vs. "minister primarius" as the translation of "prime minister." (I find primus minister here, here; minister primarius here.) It seems to me it should be "minister primarius," as I understand "primus" to be principally (if not exclusively?) ordinal, i.e. denoting "first in a sequence," whereas primarius means "primary," i.e. "foremost," which I think best expresses the role of the PM in most parliamentary systems. What do you think? I'd like to do up stipulae for Canadian prime ministers and I'd like to start dextro pede. Jackmitchell05:19, 4 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Does Morgan give a source? For the United Kingdom, definitive attestations most likely appear in the Latin summaries of debates in Parliament. IacobusAmor17:08, 11 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I don't know the latin word for that exists. If necessary you may need to coin an equivalent, either from the original greek, e.g. keratio or from the romance languages. To me caratus seems the better choice. Regardless, you can avoid the whole issue and just state the weight in standard SI units: chiliogrammata, grammata, or milligrammata. A metric carat is 200 milligrammata.--Rafaelgarcia02:02, 5 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
It looks like it might turn out into a really nice page. I feel bad not having helped improve it. Unfortunately, my specialty just isn't religion.--Rafaelgarcia00:04, 10 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Set, Superset, Subset
Verba latina quaero pro "Menge, Obermenge, Untermenge" (in English: set, superset, subset) in contextu mathematicae. Num quis me adiuvare potest? -- Scriptor1717:42, 8 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Cave, quod in mathematica set potest significare et elementi multitudinem {A,B,C,...} et solum unum elementum {A} et nihil elementi {}. Copia non potest mea sententia significare {A} et {}. --Rafaelgarcia04:07, 9 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Meum profecto non est tecum de mathematica altercari! Sed si 'empty set' Germanice leere Menge dici potest, non video, cur etiam de vacua copia loqui non possimus. Mea quidem sententia nihil obstat, quin copiam putemus tamquam involucrum quoddam abstractum membrorum quorum numerus a zero ad infinitum extenditur. Sed ut dixi, de hisce rebus tu me melius cognovisti. --Neander04:36, 9 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Post unos dies illum pensando, assentio cum Neandro quod copia sensum set aptior capit quam collectio. Causa est quod copia (grammaticali in numero singulari) semper significat numerum rerum similarum quendam, aut abundantia quaedam. Collectio autem significat numerum qui colligitur quemquam etsi dissimilares sint. Ita collectio' est generalior quam copia, sicut collectio est generalior quam set.--Rafaelgarcia00:24, 28 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Centuries
I think that centuries should be written using Roman numerals because I'm quite sure that that was the way they had been written. Nowadays, in all Romance languages they are written with Roman numerals. I'm not sure, but I think that English-speaking people are the only ones who use arabic numerals for writing centuries.--Le K-li02:29, 9 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, English speakers are not quite unique after all. But, like Le K-li, when writing Latin I find it handy to write centuries with a Roman numeral. One can do this while still linking them to the century page, thus saeculo X. I don't think anyone objects! Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 10:01, 10 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
If you don't say which sense of conquest you are looking for I have no idea how to answer the question except by trying to guess every conceivable possibility. It is customary to supply a context when asking for a meaning by supplying a phrase using the term. Conquest in the sense of conquered country? the idea of conquering? the action of conquering? etc... OK here is my attempt to guess what may have been in your head: conquer = vincere, conquered country = terra victa or natio victa; abstract idea of conquering/winning = victoria. --Rafaelgarcia07:38, 9 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
What I want is to know how is it called the process of conquering a country, e. g. The Spanish Conquest, wich is referred to the process of conquering the Inca and Aztec (and other civilizations) empires.--Le K-li15:09, 9 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Again it depends precisely on what you want to say: in the sense of subjugating the people one could write: subiugatio Hispanica; In the sense of invasion, e.g. invasio Hispanica; in the sense of seizing and colonizing a country: occupatio Hispanica. Conquisitor literally means "one who searches or inspects", i.e. an explorer and the conquistadors where so called because they explored the "unclaimed" lands in order to claim them for their home countries. Of course they did a little conquering/subjugating in addition to exploring.--Rafaelgarcia16:55, 9 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Language articles
I'm adding some articles for language families and languages, and I've upgraded (I think!) the infobox (see {{Capsa linguae}} and {{Capsa familiae linguarum}}). (I see Harrissimo has just upgraded {{Lingua artificiosa}} to match.) The colours in these boxes will match the cross-wiki colours for language families.
I'm planning to check some details in the existing infoboxes, and one thing I am itching to do is to reduce the number of sub-families and sub-sub-families and sub-sub-sub-families listed in certain cases (see for example Lingua Aragonica). This sort of hair-splitting is popular in one or two traditions of linguistics, and the worthy en:Summer Institute of Linguistics thinks it's fun, and from the SIL database it has passed into en:wiki. Other linguists think that you can never do it satisfactorily, and when you have done it as best you can it hasn't necessarily taught you very much; I'm one of those. I've nothing against discussing the sub-classifications in the text of language-family articles, all in favour in fact, best place for it, but I don't think these always-arguable details belong in infoboxes. If anyone disagrees, tell me now! Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 10:22, 10 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I have added a variant infobox {{Capsa linguae desuetae}} for languages that are extinct or are no longer anyone's mother tongue (because in these cases certain details will never be relevant, and there are others that need to be added in their place). It can be seen in use at Lingua Latina and various registers and periods of Latin for which we have articles (cf. next section!). If anyone thinks some detail should be added to it, better say so now. Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 14:37, 11 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I think some correction should be made to this template. I miss a very important thing in it: after sermo vulgaris, Latin is called linguae Romanicae, as these are the live continuation of Latin language, because the so called Latin ceased to be spoken. So what we call then Medieval Latin, New Latin, etc. is just an artificially re-created language, because live Latin now is called Spanish, Italian, etc. I just suggest indicating it some way in the template. Gratias. --Mexicanus (scribe!)19:39, 10 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Nunquam tamen desisterunt docti Latine loqui: sermo doctorum medii aevi non erat lingua quaedam Latina renata vel reconstituta sed lingua Latina vera per ecclesiam transmissa. Nec sunt linguae hodiernae quas commemoravisti (Hispanica, Italiana, Francogallica) minus "reconstitutae" quam lingua Latina medio aevo propria: erant olim mille sermones per orbem qui a lingua Latina originem tractabant, quos "dialecta" nominamus, priusquam docti linguas Romanicas aedificaverunt. Censeo linguam Latiniam aequam cum linguis Romanicis dignitatem merere (vel meruisse), etsi alius sermo alium propositum servat. Jackmitchell00:36, 11 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Jackmitchell recte dicit. Mea sententia est absurdum appellare linguas modernas Hispanicas, Francicas, Italicas linguam Latinam modernam. Sunt linguae assequelae, sed distinctae.--Rafaelgarcia01:21, 11 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Memento quod dixit linguista Max Weinreich anno 1945: "אַ שפראַך איז אַ דיאַלעקט מיט אַן אַרמײ און פֿלאָט" = "A shprakh iz a dialekt mit an armey un flot" = "Lingua est dialectos cui sunt exercitus et classis"! IacobusAmor02:23, 11 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Formula nostra non admittit status semi-coaevales linguae; sed re vera habemus. "Sermo vulgaris" debemus distinguere a saec. 2 a.C.n.; lingua post-classica (Ammiani Marcellini, Sidonii, etc.) omissa est; lingua scientifica utuntur et hodie; lingua ecclesiastica omissa est; linguae Romanicae, ut recte dicit Mexicanus, omissae sunt. Sed quis potest formulam complicatiorem facere? Minime ego! Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 14:29, 11 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Sane dictum illud praeclarum Maximi Weinreich diligo, sed spectat ad linguas vivas. Utcumque si volumus dictum linguae nostrae adhibere, significari videtur dialectos Hispanicam, Francicam, Italicam, etc. linguas proprias esse et, mirabile dictu, Vicipaediis propriis et suis dignas. Di meliora! --Iustinus07:08, 11 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Hm, thank you for your answers, but may be you didn't catch my idea. What I say is, that up to the 6th century, approximately, Latin was the native language of many people; maybe there were already dialects, but they did not differ so much to not call them Latin. But after the 8th century, Latin in its relatively united form stopped to exist, it was no longer a native language of any people, because by then, they spoke any of the dialects we call now Romance languages. I hope you just don't want to say me that Latin is spoken natively by people now :))) (Well, maybe there are people who learnt it very well, but it is not native and first language of anyone.) --Mexicanus (scribe!)07:24, 11 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
My suggestion is to divide the timeline after Sermo Vulgaris: the upper banner would be the same now it is, and create a lower banner saying Linguae Romanicae, paralelly. Shall I do it? --Mexicanus (scribe!)18:16, 11 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I put a grey background for the last 3 simbolizing that they are not native languages. If you know a better or nicer solution, you can edit and try it here how it looks. --Mexicanus (scribe!)18:46, 11 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I would think that the following would be more accurate, historically, though I haven't tried fixing the formating. (the grey looks ugly and the last rows need to be centered.
I corrected the formatting, but the problem with your version is that Romance languages already existed in the 10th century. For example Spanish is not spoken just from the 15th century, the first poem is from the 12nd. --Mexicanus (scribe!)19:50, 11 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
thanks for the formatting assist But I think that spanish (castilian) did not exist as a formal distinct language with a dictionary and grammar until the 14th century. "The first steps toward standardization of written Castilian were taken in the thirteenth century by King Alfonso X of Castile, known as Alfonso el Sabio. He assembled scribes at his court and supervised their writing, in Castilian, of extensive works on history, astronomy, law, and other fields of knowledge." Before that I suppose it would be indistinguishable from sermo vulgaris tardis in hispania. Anyway give or take a hundred years isn't a big deal in this I think. These evolutions were not overnight but gradual.--Rafaelgarcia20:00, 11 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
One question is the standardization and another the fact of existence of a language. The first Castilian poem was writen in the 12th century (Cantar de Mio Çid) and it was a complete and mature language by then. You would understand it almost as well as today's Spanish. The age of a language is not the same as when it was first used in literature. :) Another suggestion to the timeline, we should also indicate with different colors that Romance languages are the live, or, more precisely, historical continuation of Latin. What do you think? --Mexicanus (scribe!)20:07, 11 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
One solution is to split this column into two? Like this the romance languages can arise earlier than lingua humanista? Or we can just understand the century to be approximate plus or minus 200 years. I don't agree that medieval or even neolatina isn't a historical continuation of latin. It is in fact a continuation that is historical. THe fact that latin wasn't anyone's native tongue in the 17th century is important, but when the romance languages split off from latin, then they became separate languages, no longer latin. Latin is latin, french is french, spanish is spanish, all different.--Rafaelgarcia20:15, 11 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
The problem is, what I try to explain, that Romance languages did not "split off" from Latin. They are THE Latin in its always live and evoluting form. Latin and Romance languages never existed paralelly as live languages. Once we are talking of Romance languages, there is no live but artificially maintained Latin. The error is as many people imagine, that there was a Latin language and once from the nothing appeared the Romance languages and the Latin continued to be spoken. But it was never this way :D --Mexicanus (scribe!)20:33, 11 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
My point is do you define a language by who speaks it or by its grammar, rules, and vocabulary? I'm sorry but those colors below are hideous...--Rafaelgarcia20:24, 11 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
But Oscan and Umbrian are separate languages, while the romance languages are the live continuation of Latin. Oscan and Umbrian are not dialects or mother languages of Latin. --Mexicanus (scribe!)19:52, 11 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
No, because the living continuation are the Romance languages, not the Medieval or Scientific Latin. This is what the green color was supposed to mean. :) --Mexicanus (scribe!)20:36, 11 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I really don't have a clue about this new concept you are pushing. If I go to school to learn spanish I expect spanish to be taught, if latin, latin. This "living continuation" is nonsense; living continuation of latin is Newton and Gauss, not Les Miserables and el Cid. Castilian did not continue latin it REPLACED it. They're called linguae Romanicae not linguae latinae.--Rafaelgarcia20:57, 11 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I explained it in Spanish in your discussion page. I think you forgot one thing: a living language is in constant evolution. It is not the same during 2000 years. So, Latin was a living language like any other, but its form we call now Latin, was just some (let's say 300 years) of its history, then step by step it converted to the Romance languages. I never said they were not different languages, of course they are, but the concept would be the correct representation in the history timeline. --Mexicanus (scribe!)21:16, 11 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
This is nearer the truth, I think. Vulgar Latin (our Sermo vulgaris") is contemporary with Classical and post-Classical Latin. The Romance languages are undoubtedly a continuation of spoken Latin; the problem may be with fitting too many different views of language into a timeline! Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 21:06, 11 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
One more edit. The colours, to me, mean: written/classical standard (green); spoken language (red). Of course, the Romance languages developed their own written and classical standards, but that's too far beyond a Latin timeline I think.
The table looks real fine but it appears to suggest that the "Sermo vulgaris" didn't begin until saec.2/1 BC. But of course it run as an undercurrent even in the archaic period. Plautine Latin (and the kind) represents the written form of this sort of sermo. This is clearer in the timeline given in the article on the "Lingua Latina archaica". --Neander00:00, 12 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
My intention was to cover the vulgaris aspect of Plautus by saec. 2 BC and the beginning of classical Latin by saec. 1 BC.
To make finer distinctions, and e.g. distinguish the beginning of scientific Latin from the beginning of Humanist Latin, we might need a different design. But, I say again, truth doesn't reside in timelines. Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 09:57, 12 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Ummmm, I know this is out of order, but I lost the thread. Mexicane, I quote from Palmer:
"These so called 'Italic dialects' (Volscian, Velitrian, Oscan, Umbrian, Paelignian, Marrucinian, Vestinian, etc)indubitably show many resemblances to Latin, but the precise degree of relationship is difficult to determine. Scholars are undecided whether they are to be regarded as different dialects of one and the same language, 'Italic', or as separate languages."
Not to complicate an already complicated discussion which has been ably de-complicated already, but isn't there a strong socio-linguistic aspect to all this? I mean, I think we can say that if Cicero wasn't speaking Latin, nobody was; but Cicero and his cook might be speaking quite different idioms ("sermo classicus" vs. "vulgaris," I guess). Likewise, I presume that your average Gaul in Lyon might speak, from the very get-go, quite a "dialectical" form of Latin. So by the time we get to Ausonius writing beautiful classical Latin (and perhaps speaking it - who knows?) while the rest of the world apart from his class is well on the way to speaking Romance languages, we've got the coexistence of two languages; and who's to say people don't grow up speaking more than one language, one "classical" and the other everyday? We've practically reached this stage in English now, I'd say, in that there's a fairly noticeable difference between literary and scientific English and ordinary speech: we just rarely see the latter in written form, so we call the former "correct." For all I know (which isn't much) the educated classes of, say, the 10th century might still have felt that popular speech and Church Latin were in some sense the same language, even if we don't now regard them as such. Anyway, none of this affects the latest timeline which strikes me as excellent, but just to say we should beware of essentialising language. Jackmitchell04:34, 12 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Betawiki: better support for your language in MediaWiki
Dear community. I am writing to you to promote a special wiki called Betawiki. This wiki facilitates the localisation (l10n) of the MediaWiki interface. You may have changed many messages here to use your language in the interface, but if you would log in to for example the Japanese language Wiktionary, you would not be able to use the interface as well translated as here. In fact, of over 1,700 messages in the core of MediaWiki, 1030 messages have been translated. Betawiki also supports the translation of messages for well over 100 extensions, with over 1,550 messages. Translators for over 70 languages contribute their work to MediaWiki this way every month.
If you have any further questions, please let me know on my talk page on Betawiki. We will try and assist you as much as possible, for example by importing all messages from a local wiki for you to start with, if you so desire.
You can also find us on the Freenode IRC network in the channel #mediawiki-i18n where we would be happy to help you get started.
Currently 58.68% of the MediaWiki messages and 19.67% of the messages used in extensions used by the WMF have been localised. Please help us help your language by localising at Betawiki. Thanks, GerardM13:06, 26 Martii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Currently 59.60% of the MediaWiki messages and 18.30% of the messages of the extensions used by the Wiki Foundation projects have been localised. Please help us help your language by localising at Betawiki. This is the recent localisation activity for your language. Thanks, 80.56.11.1310:10, 26 Aprilis 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Sermo vulgaris et biblia vulgata
THe recent discusison of sermo vulgaris as distinct from classical latin, got me to wondering if vulgar latin circa 400 AD corresponds to the latin in the biblia sacrata as translated by Jerome? The point is that at 400AD , the vulgar latin in the bible seems hardly different from Ciceronian latin except for, I would say, style and some seemingly minor vocabulary choices. Or did I miss something.--Rafaelgarcia18:49, 13 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
A big issue, maybe one for an article rather than a Taberna item! First, the differences betweeen the Vulgate and Cicero are greater than you suggest (look again at the word order, the structure and linking of sentences, the Vulgate's use of the present participle and of relative clauses). Second, Ciceronian Latin is not a monolith: Cicero's letters are closer to the sermo vulgaris than his orations. Third, although Plautus, Cicero, Apuleius and Jerome all give us evidence of the sermo vulgaris, it is indirect. The texts that give more direct evidence of Vulgar Latin are inscriptions (notably graffiti) and totally unliterary documents (Apicius is an example). Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 19:48, 13 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
A point I should have mentioned is that (as with all languages) pronunciation changes continuously, and may not be reflected in spelling. That's the case with Latin, and it's why graffiti, written by people who can't spell, are so useful. That's also why the emergence of Romance languages appears sudden. It wasn't: rather, they become suddenly visible to us at the point when (in the 9th/10th century) they were recognized as so distinct from Latin that in order to write them effectively a new orthography was adopted. Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 10:13, 14 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
The main difference between spanish and latin, it seems to me, is not so much in the vocabulary and pronunciation as in the loss of case structure and connecting words.And apparently both case structure and connecting words are in full evidence in Jerome's bible.By 400 the pronunciation may have evolved, the grammar seems to have evolved only slightly.
I repeat: the evidence that Jerome gives of the sermo vulgaris is indirect. Vulgate is not identical with Vulgar. But there's quite a bit in the Vulgate that would have horrified Cicero's grammar teacher. Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 16:24, 14 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
You're saying that at some point Latin was like english, where we don't pronounce things the way they are spelt, and spelling is a difficult skill to master in itself. I think there is plenty to suggest that that is what was happening. Nevertheless, it is surprising to me that the difference between Vulgate and Ciceronian latin is no larger than the difference between english 300 years ago and english of today, because 400 years later the language had become so different. It suggests to me that something significant happened after 400. And indeed something did. --Rafaelgarcia14:32, 14 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Until 400 the Army, administration, Empire-wide trade, transport and culture, all strongly discouraged the break-up of spoken Latin into dialects; and, in addition, encouraged the maintenance of a single written standard. The collapse of the Empire was crucial linguistically. Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 16:24, 14 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Yes indeed, as you say, that event seems to be pivotal. Judging from how modern english came into being, wars, invasions, etc., more generally, seem to be the main causes of large language shifts. These in addition to illiteracy and what one may call "bulkanization" of a culture. All of these causes seem plentiful after the fall of the empire.--Rafaelgarcia17:23, 14 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
There's a parallel, if I recall correctly, in the seemingly quick change from Old English to Middle English: the Norman conquest didn't just suddenly discourage people from inflecting their nouns, but by making Norman French the language of administration it lifted the veil, as it were, on centuries of linguistic change which had not been reflected in the written language. Jackmitchell02:20, 15 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Potest oportere neologismo uti, sicut graphitus -i, quod secundum fontem dubiosam iterretialem, "Es un término tomado del latín graphiti: en italiano, "graffiti" es el plural de graffito, que significa "marca o inscripción hecha rascando o rayando un muro" y así se llaman las inscripciones que han quedado en las paredes desde tiempos del Imperio Romano. Raffaele Garrucci divulgó el término en medios académicos internacionales a mediados del siglo XIX." Si hoc neologismo uteris, oportet te scribere exempli gratia graphiti, id est figura graphio exarata in muris vel locis publicis...aut similes. --Rafaelgarcia00:52, 15 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I added an example text in Hispanian Vulgar Latin (or proto-Spanish), which is much closer yet to Latin than the Old-French text you put. --Mexicanus (scribe!)20:46, 15 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I am unsure of how to write percents in Latin..."Decem partes humani ADN per centem est fragmenta endogenuorum retroviorum" would this work for something like "Ten percent of human DNA is fragments of endogenous retroviruses"? Tibi gratias ago! -- Secundus Zephyrus06:45, 18 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Berard's book, it turns out, has two instances where he quotes a percent:
"... Experimentum, qualiacumque sint eius singula, ita constitutum est ut quinquagesimis partibus ex centum (50%) probabile sit fore ut gasum liberetur eademque portione sit probabile non fore. ..."
which I translate-->"THe experiment,..., is so constituted so that with the 50th part out of a hundred it be probable so that the gas be liberated..."
"...Alterna condicione, quod ad unicam particulam quampiam attinet, tolli possint ad amussim quinquaginta partes ex centum (“50%”) et (I) omnium momenti impetus numerorum qui particulæ tribui possint et simul (II) omnium locorum quos eadem particula occupare possit."
which I translate--> "With the other condition, ...,they (the probabilities) can be raised to almost 50 parts out of 100.... both (I) of ...and at the same time (II) of...."
Note that in the second case he does not use the ordinal but in both cases he prefers ex to e in front of a number, despite the fact that the number begins with a consonant. So that the formula he uses is: number + pars ex centum. --Rafaelgarcia21:20, 18 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
In your case "Decem partes Humani ADN e centum" -> ten parts of human DNA out of 100, may or may not quite mean what you intend. But "Decima pars Humani ADN e centum"-> A tenth part of Human DNA out of 100, which catches your meaning of 10% more closely. Or even more simply "Decima pars Humani ADN" already says 10% of human DNA, right?--Rafaelgarcia21:30, 18 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
It would seem to me that "decima pars ex centum" is a conflation of "decima pars" and "decem partes e(x) centum". "Quinquagesima pars ex centum" is of course nonsens, "a 50th part out of a hundred" being more likely 2% than 50%. "Quinquaginta partes ex centum" on the other hand would make perfect sense. In normal Latin idiom X partes (X being a cardinal number) means X parts out of (X+1), but by adding the "ex centum" the default denominator of X+1 is effectively cancelled. --Fabullus21:57, 18 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Please, don't forget that Latin has a noun for 'percent', viz. centesima. So, I'd translate "Ten percent of human DNA is fragments of endogenous retroviruses" as Denae centesimae humani ADN e fragmentis retrovirorum endogenorum constant. --Neander03:21, 28 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I think they are fine so long as there are people to keep them active and updated. It's something that Vicipaedia has to consider seriously because, compared with major-language Wikipedias, we editors are thin on the ground. I guess the main thing is to plan low-maintenance portae etc. I agree, too, that following to some extent the pattern of the Pagina prima has a couple of advantages: some of the layout work is done for you, and the design looks better because it matches what we have already. Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 14:01, 23 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I put together a template that should make the creation of a portal fairly easy: {{Porta}}. It is not too flexible, but it should allow for a good start. When you create a portal (see Formula:Porta/exemplum 1), you just have to specify a page title ("titulus") and create the introduction text (which is mandatory, that's the "caput" redlink).
You will automatically be provided with suggestions for further items to add to your portal (that's the "Tu quoque adiuvare potes" box). If you decide to do all this, your portal will look similar to Formula:Porta/exemplum 2. Hope it's useful, and merry Christmas! --UV01:25, 25 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for the information. It still seems better to me if someone of you create the formula of a portal like Porta:Berolina or Porta:Germania, then i fill it in the next days. I am not sure with the formulae. Merry Christmas!Vulpinus10:01, 25 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
To UV: Thank you for the work! Is there any way you could have the font colour and formatting as an option (like with the white and caps in the dark blue the present Porta:Finnia?).
To Vulpinus: UV has set it out quite clearly. Maybe you should start the Porta:Germania and, when (or if) you go wrong, you can be corrected. It doesn't look hard to use and I'll undoubtedly be converting the Porta:Finnia to it soon. You could even make usor:Vulpinus/Porta:Germania so that you don't need to worry about slipping up? Harrissimo01:32, 27 Decembris 2007 (UTC).[reply]
What would be the correct/preferred format for adding grammatical information, like the genetive-ending and the gender, to a word? Do we have a standard? --Fabullus08:40, 20 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
see the page Physica for an example. You'll notice the link to the latin wiki dictionary entry for the word (In this case the link takes you to the entry for chemia which has the same declension pattern.--Rafaelgarcia16:16, 20 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Secundum dictionaria varia quae possideo nomen hormon derivatum est a participio Graeco ὁρμῶν, ~ντος. Latine ergo appellandum videtur hormon, ~ntis, et id ipsum est forma quam invenimus in paginis peridodici Latini Ephemeridis, e.g. hic. Aliubi in hoc eodem periodico genus quoque huius nominis cognoscimus, legentes: "... hormon anno 1999 demum inventum, quod inter alia officia etiam hoc nobis affert, ... " Summatim: nomen hormon cui genetivus est hormontis genere est neutro. Nomina variorum hormontum (vel hormontium?) - ut etiam testosteron - exemplum sequi videntur ipsius nominis hormontis. --Fabullus17:30, 21 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Noli festinare. Scire velim quid alii sentiant. Sunt quidem auctores quoque apud Ephemeridem qui genetivum faciunt hormonis (sine T): vide hic. Eligendum est nobis inter etymologiam (quae genetivum hormontis suggerit ) et usum actualem in linguis huius temporis ubi formas semper sine T invenimus. Quidquid tamen de hac re constituemus, id quoque spectabit ad nomen ion. --Fabullus10:08, 22 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
In hac quidem symbola forma ablativi pluralis "hormonis" ter legitur et gen.pl. "hormonorum" semel, quod nominativum singularem "hormonum" indicare videtur, cum praeter exspectationem abl.sg. "hormone" legatur. Ergo varietas viget, et per me vigeat. --Neander17:49, 22 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Felicem diem natalem
Ego vobis exopto felicem diem natalem et prosperum annum novum, etiam gratias vobis ago ob vestros adiutos mihi factos. And sorry for my bad Latin. :) Valete! --Mexicanus (scribe!)20:56, 21 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Cum in Vicipaedia scribeo, mihi adhibendum est pronuntiationem scholasticam aut restitutam? In primis, cum litteram "V, v" adhibeo: debeo scribere <<vivere; valeo; caveo>> aut <<uiuere: ualeo; caueo>>? -- [Anon.]
Possumus scribere v et u ubi restitutus modus classicus eundem consonantem /w/ sonat: suavis. Sequens modum tralaticium (sive Italicum, sive ecclesiasticum), scribe v ubi consonantem /v/ sonat, et u ubi vocalem /u/ vel consonantem /w/ sonat. —Mucius Tever23:33, 26 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Hi, i am new to vicipaedia, and i'd like to contribute to the common latin knowledge ;) since i am a philosopher, i thought i could write something dealing with the subject, so i've started to write something about Leibniz; basically, i'd like to traslate from the english version into latin. Is this ok? :) scripsit Usor:Spiritus Eversor
Of course you are most welcome to add encyclopedic content to the page Godefridus Guilielmus Leibnitius. When adding content, please specify your source in the summary box (e. g. "from en:Gottfried Leibniz") and be sure not to copy copyrighted content without permission. If you need help or if you are unsure about something, please ask (the Taberna here is a good place for this). Welcome! --UV23:12, 28 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
And, by the way: Please "sign" your contributions on talk pages and in the Taberna with four tildes (~~~~). This makes it easier to see who said what. Thanks! --UV23:12, 28 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Transliteration of Cyrillic to Latin via Greek/Hebrew
(Sorry for using English, I can't speak Latin actively enough yet.)
As I have read at Vicipaedia:Translatio_nominum_propriorum#Translitteratio_seu_Romanizatio, proper names not originally written in the Latin alphabet are transliterated via ISO transliteration and then rid of diacritics. Greek and Hebrew names are exceptions because they already have a classical transliteration scheme for Latin (Translitteratio Linguae Graecae, Translitteratio linguae Hebraicae). Well ... do you know that nearly all letters of the Cyrillic alphabet are direct descendants of either Greek or Hebrew ones? Therefore we could invent a "classical" transliteration scheme for Cyrillic too, just replacing the Cyrillic letter with its Greek/Hebrew equivalent and transliterating this equivalent into Latin in the classical way. I tried to make a table of how such scheme would look like:
I don't know if this system is better than the current one; for example, the Ukrainian president Ющенко becomes Oistenco in it - instead of current Iuscenco. But I feel this possibility should also be considered. --Gabriel Svoboda14:36, 30 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I have been adding {{Non stipula}} to some of the articles on Swedish "comitia" which only tell you the name and that it is a comitia of Sweden. This much can easily, I'm sure, be found on the page Suecia under the Comiatia section. I know some other vicipaedians do not like these, frankly pathetic, articles - created by early users probably just trying to boost page numbers. Do they class as non stipula? Do some object to me labelling them who think maybe that this gives the pages a chance to grow? Please say if you do and I'll remove them or we can discuss. Harrissimo16:03, 31 Decembris 2007 (UTC).[reply]
You are technically right. The example I saw also had a location map and a formula (list of counties) on it, but, yes, the text is minute. It's a very borderline case. These are slightly better than the kind of Non stipula that has no links to it and not much reason ever to grow. I think I would be sorry to see the entries deleted when, with little extra effort, a couple of useful details could be added (e.g. capital city? population?) and the border would be crossed. Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 16:53, 31 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
In my view, these articles are valid stubs: They give an acceptable explanation of the lemma, and they serve to "unify" titles: If, e. g., the page Dalia were deleted, chances would be much higher that some pages that have to do with Sweden link to Dalia and others link to *Dalslandia and we would not notice, because both would be redlinks. As long as the page Dalia exists, people will correct redlinks to point to the existing page (or people will discuss moving the page). Furthermore, aside from the definition of the lemma, the pages contain relevant content (a locator map, categories, interwiki links). The only thing I wish these articles would additionally have is a reference to a source where the title is attested, but in my view these are nevertheless valid stubs and should stay. --UV21:49, 31 Decembris 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I agree with Andrew and UV. Yes, from the content it is poor because there is just one short sentence, the definition. However, this is what a beginner (in Latin) can manage. It is the frame for the content. See what someone had to create when he wanted to add a short information (= the "second sentence") about such a Swedish comitia:
He has to know how to create a page.
He has to know how to make the lemma bold.
He has to know how to make links.
He has to know how to make headlines.
He has to know how to make interwiki links.
He has to find the interwiki links.
He has to know how to add categories.
He should have an idea about our categories.
He might even have to create the category, if there is no other page in this category.
He has to know how to include a template.
He has to know about our special templates.
He has to know how to include an image.
He has to loook for an image.
He has to know about adding a description to an image.
He has to add this description.
He has to add the definition.
He has to add the "second" sentence.
So he has to do 16 steps before he can add his piece of information. We should be aware that there are people who could do this step #17 but do not know how to manage the 16 steps before and we should appreciate if someone prepares an article for this 17th step, which could be the first step of a Latinist, but Wiki beginner. We should have tasks for the different levels of competency and we should have a concept how they can work together and how everybody can contribute what he can contribute. Who can make the framework should make the framework, who can make the content shall make the content. Users who can do both are especially welcome, of course. ;-) I think each page which defines a lemma and provides the technical frame for adding more content is useful. What I am sometimes/often missing, are the sources, like UV says. A valid definition with sources has a special value in this Wikipedia: Sometimes there is no need to prove that someone can write about something (= content) in Latin, but that we can can call it (= it's title, name) in Latin. So we should be happy even with pages which just name things. This Wikipedia is different from other Wikipedias, but Latin is different, too. Providing a good framework for Latinist to add their "second sentences" might be of value for the project. Our situation is different from the English or German Wikipedia where some of the users are fanatically trying to create the better Britannica or the better Brockhaus. I think we should stay ambitious what concerns sources, correctness and scientificness, but we should stay patient what concerns the amount of content some articles provide. ;-) --Rolandus13:04, 1 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Of course, Rolande, I appreciate what hard work we need to even get a tiny stipula and, although these seem to have just been rushed pages, I will try to add the capita and numeri incolarum when I have the time so they at least give the reader something back. I'll remove the non stipulas now. Gratias pro responsis, Harrissimo13:29, 1 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC).[reply]
No, that was IacobusAmor's work, he also added an important detail: Those are the historical provinces (that still influence everyday life) but not the current administrative units of Sweden. Greetings, --UV13:43, 1 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Oh! Well thanks to Iacobe for adding that in - I will make sure all of the pages are now provinciae historicae, not comitia - and thanks to you for taking off the templates :) Harrissimo13:58, 1 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC).[reply]
I am writing an article on film grammar, but I am having troubles coming up with a word for "shot". I don't know if a literal translation such as missus, -us would be the best approach, since the derivation of "shot" is kind of obscure anyway (perhaps since the first cameras looked like guns?). Even the OED doesn't offer me much help. But perhaps a word from a Romance language would help? Italian seems the best with inquadratura which derives from inquadrare from in quadri ("in a painting" I think). Would it be safe to borrow this word? I do have one other idea, though it's a reach. Film grammar is usually compared to language grammar (e.g. frame=letter, shot=word, scene=sentence, sequence=paragraph), so what if the same words (littera, verbum, etc.) were used metaphorically? Any other suggestions? -- Secundus Zephyrus04:47, 4 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I don't know the best word or words. But perhaps you should consider so perhaps shot = photographema, scene = scaena, sequence = series. Other words to ponder that might be relevant are "scaena" (scene) or "exceptaculum" (excerpt) or "articulus pelliculae" (joint or portion of film). In translating "still camera shot" remember "Photographia" (art photo) is distinguished from Photographema (photo picture). --Rafaelgarcia07:13, 4 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Enlarging Latin Vicipaedia
For your consideration: some reflections on how the Volapük Vükiped enlarged its number of articles:
I don't see the value in having many articles as an end in itself. Also latin does not lend itself to robotic translation. I would rather see a small complete, well-written encyclopeidia than a huge, badly written one.--Rafaelgarcia14:31, 4 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Don't know if there are better words but I would suggest "Area epotata" or "regio epotata" = "drained area" or "regio a fluvio epotata" = "region drained by a river"; I would also think that "vallis" = "valley" would work in most cases too, but not all valleys are drainage basins I suppose.--Rafaelgarcia14:40, 4 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I think yes both forms are ok. Epotus is the adjective whereas epotata is the participle. I don't know if bascauda is a good translation of basin though. What is your source? Trupmann dictionary suggests labrum for basin in the sense of reservoir. Even in english there seem to be a multitude of equivalent terms. Nevertheless, the way the article above is pitched drainage basin clearly refers to a geographical area.--Rafaelgarcia16:00, 4 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I simply thought bascauda -> bassin etymologically. For washing bassin I found also "aqualis". - According to my source "epotus" is already participle, but maybe that needs further research. --Alex101116:51, 4 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Yes you're right. Both epotus and epotatus are listed as participle for epotare on Words. Regarding the best translation for basin, I too am confused. Different dictionaries give different translations. Perhaps the favorite word for this changed over time? I don't know.--Rafaelgarcia17:33, 4 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Bot command translations
Hi. Could anybody translate me these interwiki bot commands to Latin (they will be displayed in all interwiki bot summaries here instead English):
robot - robotum automaton
Adding: - addens (literally) but if saying "robbot adding:X" state this as "Robotum addit:X"
Modifying: - mutans (literally) but if saying "Robot modifying: X" state this as "Robotum mutat:X"
Removing: - abdens (literally) but if saying "Robot modifying: X" state this as "Robotum abdit: X"
I added my shot. Robotum is glossed from Morgan. Notice that latin present tense in "Robotum addit X" has the same meaning as "Robot is adding X"--Rafaelgarcia14:37, 6 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Translation will be here: Idioma-bot (disputatio | conlationes) (robot Adding: lt:Inocentas II). I think translation Robot is adding (Robotum addit) would be ok. Thanks! lt:User:Hugo.arg15:33, 6 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Ioscius is right that automaton would be an OK translation. But Morgan attributed Robotum to Carlo Egger, author of Lexicon Latinitatis recentis. That made me look into it a little deeper and I think that robotum means a robot in the primary sense (like an artificial human or android or slave) i.e. "a mechanical device that sometimes resembles a human and is capable of performing a variety of often complex human tasks on command or by being programmed in advance." whereas automaton is more general, including automatic mechanical mechanisms, like a gas pump "automaton distributorium" (LRL also from Morgan). (English definitions from Free Online Dictionary) In other words, robotum evokes the idea of a human laborer with some measure of decision making ability while automaton evokes something automatic, mindless and limited. Both ideas apply to what a bot is. I don't see a preference.--Rafaelgarcia22:18, 7 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Ad minimum, praeferentia sit usus quo solebamus uti, qui, quem dixi, est automaton. Est etiam, ut dixi, classicius (vero Graecius, sed quidquid id est) quam robotum (quod, mea quidem sententia, risibile est). Consentio putans Rafaeli quoque robotum potius referre automaton forma humanum. --Ioscius(disp)06:05, 8 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Consentio verbo automaton utimur cum bot ad Latinem vertamus. Sed nescio quod sentes robotum esse risibilem. Mea sententia robotum melius videtur cum robot sensu stricto vertamus. --Rafaelgarcia16:19, 8 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Quia etymologia Slavica est. Работать Russice valet idem ac laborare lingua nostra. Ergo est in eo modo sicut hitum quem Kedemus proposuit pro Anglico verbo "hit" sensu "hit song or album". Dissimilitudinem inter stultitias Kedemi et Caroli Egger hoc in casu non video.--Ioscius(disp)16:56, 8 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Mihi oportet magis de hoc commentari, quod suspecto fortasse hoc verbum esse unum e illis verbis internationalibus, ut videamus in variis linguis: [[:ar:روبوت]] [[:bn:রোবট]] [[:zh-min-nan:Robot]] [[:bs:Robot]] [[:bg:Робот]] [[:ca:Robot]] [[:cs:Robot]] [[:da:Robot]] [[:de:Roboter]] [[:en:Robot]] [[:et:Robot]] [[:el:Ρομπότ]] [[:es:Robot]] [[:eo:Roboto]] [[:eu:Robot]] [[:fa:روبات]] [[:fr:Robot]] [[:gl:Robot]] [[:ko:로봇]] [[:hr:Robot]] [[:io:Roboto]] [[:id:Robot]] [[:it:Robot]] [[:he:רובוט]] [[:lv:Robots]] [[:lt:Robotas]] [[:hu:Robot]] [[:nl:Robot]] [[:ja:ロボット]] [[:no:Robot]] [[:nn:Robot]] [[:nrm:Robot]] [[:oc:Robòt]] [[:uz:Robot]] [[:pl:Robot]] [[:pt:Robot]] [[:ru:Робот]] [[:sq:Roboti]] [[:simple:Robot]] [[:sk:Robot]] [[:sr:Робот]] [[:su:Robot]] [[:fi:Robotti]] [[:sv:Robot]] [[:ta:இயந்திரவியல்]] [[:th:หุ่นยนต์]] [[:vi:Người máy]] [[:tr:Robot]] [[:uk:Робот]] [[:ur:روبالہ]] [[:yi:ראבאט]] [[:zh:机器人]] --Rafaelgarcia17:13, 8 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
A robot seems to be no more than a machina servilis, or maybe just a servus. How are folks for whom 'bot' & 'robot' are robotum going to gloss 'nanobot'? For that sense, servus would easily offer servulus.IacobusAmor17:51, 8 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Nanorobotum...Robotum parvulum non est idem quam nanorobotum quod, sicut mica, sunt magnitudine nanometrorum. Item robotum non est idem quam servus mechanicus nec machina servilis, quod nonnulla robota, sicut androides Data in Itere Stellari, possunt esse autonomia et independentia. Ille Data non est servus.--Rafaelgarcia19:07, 8 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Immo, nego nanorobotum esse purum: si Anglicum robot generat Latinum robotum, certe nanobot (verbum "portmanteau") generat nanobotum, sed iterum pono recta verba "classicalia" esse servus ('robot') et servulus ('nanobot'). IacobusAmor13:04, 9 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Hanc perlegenti disputationem mihi videtur non satis iam cogitari de contextu verbi quo opus est. Num haec machina quae singulas Vicipaediae res e lingua in aliam vertit similiaque facit robotum est sensu proprio, i.e. homo artificialis? Nonne potius automaton est? --Ceylon21:03, 8 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Recte dicis, Ceylon, sed iam omnes consentimus verbo automaton utimur cum bot ad Latinem vertamus. Disputatio inceps supra est de utrum robotum vere valit ut nomem latinum legitimum. Homo artificialis mea sententia est alia res: potest esse robotum quod liberum arbitrium habet aut potest esse homo biologicus creatus in laboratorio (i.e. artificially gestated, genetically engineered, etc.., clone).--Rafaelgarcia21:30, 8 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
->Elliot was one of the founders of the American Museum of Natural History in New York and the American Ornithologists' Union. He was also curator of zoologia at the Field Museum in Chicago.
Elliot used his wealth to publish a series of sumptuous color-plate books on birds and animals. Elliot wrote the text himself and commissioned artists such as Iosephus Wolf and Iosephus Smit, both of whom had worked for Ioannes Gould, to provide the illustrations.
The National Academy of Sciences awards the Daniel Giraud Elliot medal "for meritorious work in zoology or paleontology published in a three- to five-year period. Established through the Daniel Giraud Elliot Fund by gift of Miss Margaret Henderson Elliot."<-
Ofcourse i like to add these institutes: American Museum of Natural History; Field Museum (Chicago); American Ornithologists' Union; National Academy of Sciense en ofcourse the Smithsonian Institute, maybe you can help me with the titles, Hendricus21:53, 8 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I would say: Museum Americanum Historiae Naturalis, Museum Fieldianum Historiae Naturalis; Consociatio Americana Ornithologorum; Academia Nationalis Scientiae; Institutum Smithsonianum. I'm copying this to the Taberna and others may make better suggestions. I say Consociatio because we have avoided Unio in the past, I guess because it's a rare word in Latin. Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 12:58, 9 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I agree with all above, except for Institutum Smithsonianum, which is written here (one of the institution's websites, in fact) as Institutio Smithsoniana. Harrissimo20:10, 9 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC).[reply]
The Proto-Indo-European language fragment is a linguistic construct inferred by means of the comparative method, the purpose of which is a formal demonstration of the fact that a set of (subfamilies of) languages may spring from a common source. Epistemologically, the problem is rather similar to that of codicology, i.e. relating a given set M of medieval and renaissance manuscripts (of, say, Plautus) by comparing members of M and detecting systematic similarities and differences between them. Basically the PIE language fragment is a tool for historical linguistics. It would be highly desirable to present the views of various "visionaries" (of which there's no dearth) under a separate heading and categorisation. Nor is alchemy treated under chemistry. --Neander18:55, 10 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Copied from Disputatio:Sequanus: I always thought that the French river Seine was called Sequana in Latin, as it was called by every ancient Latin writer from Caesar onwards. Sequanus I only knew as the singular of Sequani, a famous tribe in ancient Gaul. I do not exclude the possibility that at some time someone may have called the river Sequanus (although I would like to see the source), but even so priority should be given to Sequana. Could someone please interchange the article Sequanus and the redirection page Sequana? Thanks a lot. --Fabullus14:07, 13 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Could someone please explain how to insert ancient Greek quotes into pages? The German Wikipedia has a readymade polytonic font below the edit window, but Vicipaedia doesn't (and, eheu, neither does the English Wikipedia). I'm aware that Anglo-Saxons tend to be brought up to believe that accents are a reactionary or at best superfluous arabesque never used by the real Greeks and invented by continental schoolmasters in order to make the language inaccessible to anybody but themselves. But I still can't bring myself to writing ancient Greek using a monotonic font.--Ceylon15:14, 13 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
This becomes easier if you have installed modern Greek keyboarding as an option on your computer. If you have, you can at least type all required letters except the "polytonic" ones. If you haven't, you can get all such letters from below the edit window.
Type all the letters you can in one of these two ways. For the letters that you can't type, you need to open another tab or window with your browser; in this new tab go to en:Polytonic_orthography#Examples_of_polytonic_characters. You don't need to open an edit window. Select each of the letters you want, in turn, one at once; copy it; and paste it into your edit page in Vicipaedia.
The normal font does not look very good with polytonic characters. For a slightly better-looking font, put your Greek text into a formula, thus: {{Polytonic|Γρέεκ}}.
I added a number of characters to our edittools below the editing window. If you still miss some characters, please let me know which ones are missing! --UV19:54, 13 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Many thanks, UV. Unfortunately my browser (Internet Explorer, horribile dictu) does not display them though. Is there anything I can do about that other than changing my browser? It does display (most of) the characters in the German wiki by the way.--Ceylon20:19, 13 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Wow! I can see them! Marvellous, UV. Ceylon, might it be a question of purging your browser cache? I'm going to try them out here: ἀἁὰᾶἂἃἄἅἆἇ ᾳᾀᾁᾴᾲᾷᾄᾅᾂᾃᾆᾇ ἐἑὲἔἕἒἓ ἠἡὴῆἤἢἣἥἦἧ ῃῄῂῇᾐᾑᾔᾒᾕᾓᾖᾗ ἰἱὶῖἴἲἵἳἶἷ ὸὀὁὄὅὂὃ ῤῥ ὐὑὺῦὔὕὒὓὖὗ ὠὡὼῶὤὢὥὣὦὧ ῳῴῲῷᾠᾡᾤᾢᾥᾣᾦᾧ
Yes, they are all there. But there is just one point. In the four-character groups, within each vowel, in which rough-or-smoooth breathing is combined with acute-or-grave accent, they are not all in the same order. Since they are so tiny on the screen, it would be easier if they were all in the same order. The majority are in the following order: ᾤᾢᾥᾣ; if you managed to rearrange the following ἂἃἄἅ ᾄᾅᾂᾃ ἔἕἒἓ ὄὅὂὃ ὔὕὒὓ so that they were in the same order, that would be perfect. Does it make sense? Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 20:43, 13 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Sorry, I made another major change before reading the comments here. Unless you prefer the old edittools version (without dropdown box – then I can change it back), could you please tell me
whether you can see the polytonic characters now (and, in case you cannot, whether you can see them in the edittools on the German wikipedia), and
whether the order is fine now or not. If you would prefer a different order, please give me the entire line of polytonic characters in the desired order (I am using an old computer and I never see polytonic characters properly, therefore making these changes is a bit difficult for me). Thanks! --UV21:10, 13 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
OK, many thanks, UV. As far as I'm concerned, the drop-down box is fine ... The order I suggest for the whole polytonic group of characters is this. ἀἁὰᾶἄἂἅἃἆἇ ᾳᾀᾁᾴᾲᾷᾄᾂᾅᾃᾆᾇ ἐἑὲἔἒἕἓ ἠἡὴῆἤἢἥἣἦἧ ῃᾐᾑῄῂῇᾔᾒᾕᾓᾖᾗ ἰἱὶῖἴἲἵἳἶἷ ὀὁὸὄὂὅὃ ῤῥ ὐὑὺῦὔὒὕὓὖὗ ὠὡὼῶὤὢὥὣὦὧ ῳᾠᾡῴῲῷᾤᾢᾥᾣᾦᾧAndrew Dalby (disputatio) 21:57, 13 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Χάριν σοι ἔχω, ὦ ΟΥϜ! Herzlichen Dank, perfekt! My browser still opts for replacing the accented characters by boxes on the actual page and in the edit window (it does that on the German wiki, too), but I can clearly see the typeset below. And your old computer still refuses to display them? A job almost reminiscent of Beethoven composing symphonies he couldn't hear ... :) --Ceylon22:06, 13 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I arranged the characters in the order proposed by Andrew. Luckily, to handle computer software is a bit easier than to compose a symphony … If any other issues are still open, please tell me! --UV23:58, 13 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Nimia consilia
If someone (it would probably have to be one of the magistratus?) happens to feel sufficiently bored and confident to clear up the mess of 'Guidelines for Users' on here, he might run a chance of being abundantly rewarded in the afterlife. A lot of these pages overlap and/or are confusingly linked or otherwise interconnected: Vicipaedia:Commendationes paginarum recte scribendarum, Vicipaedia:Auxilium paginarum recensendarum, Vicipaedia:Ops nexusque usoribus novis, Vicipaedia:Latinitas, Vicipaedia:Gradus Latinitatis, Vicipaedia:Numeri Romani, Vicipaedia:A est B, Vicipaedia:FAQ etc. I would prefer a clear starting point with a list of links leading to clearly named pages. I also think that either the FAQ or the Main Page ought to spell out some of the motives behind the Latin Vicipaedia project (many people ask this question so it would be good to have a common reference - and maybe start a useful discussion). I noticed that the topic has come up in quite a few discussions (e.g. some contributions by Usor:Irenaeus), but I haven't found a page dedicated to this topic yet. I'm new, so please forgive if I have overlooked something.--Ceylon22:50, 14 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
No, Ceylon, you are absolutely right... Most of this stuff is a complete mess... The staggering amount of links to these pages, and the, as you indicated, extremely boring nature of the project has kept progress on the simplification and unification of these pages rather agonizingly slow. I am sufficiently bored these next two weeks (school doesn't start til the 28th) so hopefully I can make some progress on this and our Vicipaedia:Porta eruditionis, which I've been meaning to fix for months now.--Ioscius(disp)13:38, 15 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Boring but full of merit and virtue - and isn't that what the Romans were all about? It might be wise, though, to propose a structure or, much more importantly, titles for the new pages on the Taberna before actually changing anything. --Ceylon14:12, 15 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
You know, I actually might start a new (temporary) Vicipaedia: namespace page for it. Something like Vicipaedia:Quidnam inferorum cum tantis paginis talibusque in spatio Vicipaediano?!. That way we can decide what to merge, what to erase, and what to redo without making the Taberna a mille passum long.--Ioscius(disp)17:24, 15 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Where would we have this page that would tie our rules together? I think that is the purpose of VP:PC and Vicipaedia:Salve, but they far too brief at the moment. I like the idea of having some pretty boxes rather than blocks of text to introduce our rules though. English has Wikipedia:Introduction and links from there which may also be an idea. Alternatively, we could sort our Vicipaedia: pages under titles or in a box by what they refer to e.g. pages (VP:HP, Vicipaedia:Stipula...), editing style (VP:APE, Vicipaedia:Pipe trick...), latin language (Vicipaedia:Latinitas...) - I'd also like to discuss on this temporary page you're making. Valete! Harrissimo19:02, 15 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC).[reply]
An overhaul and a reorganization of the contents in our Vicipaedia: namespace would be a great step forward. I particularly like the idea that one page should expressly state some of the main motives behind the Vicipaedia project.
Although its contents would need discussion, Vicipaedia:Mores Vicipaediae (Rolandus started this page a while ago) may provide an additional, interesting perspective on how we might organize our rules (and make them easily retrievable and accessible). --UV20:58, 16 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Usor:Rolandus added some important points to this on my user page. A brief summary in English: Vicipaedia users fall into categories with very different backgrounds re. their Latin and wiki proficiency. There's no one introduction that could cater for all of them. Thus it's better to have a range of short interlinking namespace articles. This also comes in handy for settling recurring disputes by pointing to a clear reference such as Vicipaedia:A est B. Maybe a sort of namespace sitemap could be established at Vicipaedia:Salve. (Please correct if I missed something, Rolande). Commenting on this, I imagine something like a list of the main rules at Vicipaedia:Enchiridion auctoris with links to individual sites providing details and reasons. So individual users could consult language, style, or wiki advice in detail according to their needs, but there would still be a common port of call. --Ceylon12:09, 18 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for that summary -- I find German rather hard going!
Thanks for the summary. Yes, my main point is, that we do not have a typical user, so we should provide different introductions to our collection. This makes it even easier because a specific introduction does not need to satisfy all demands, just the demands of a specific group. The several indroductions are just an envelope for the collection of "standard information" which is interlinked. Of course, our collection needs much cleanup and there are some introductions which might be rather useless and should be removed. --Rolandus18:17, 18 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
As you will know, a small selection of help pages is listed on the Pagina prima; these same pages are all linked together with a box at the top. The list of these pages is at {{Opes}} and the box (created to contain the list) is at {{Opesbox}}. Rafael, I and others have made sure that these few pages are in reasonable order and available both in Latin and English. In working on the namespace as a whole, you may well want to change this arrangement, or add to the selection of pages, or link them differently ... all is possible! Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 12:36, 18 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Cum recenseo commentaria
Cum recenseo commentaria, non iam video parvulas litteras Graecas, Russicas, macronizatas, etc., quae olim subfuerunt in pagina. Quo iverunt? Quando redient? IacobusAmor13:35, 16 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Ibi sunt, sed oportet botonem imprimire in laevo latere ubi dicit "Norma"; tunc in indice monstrato "Cyrillice" scrutandum est, vel "Graece", etc...--Rafaelgarcia14:29, 16 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Restaurant
For "restaurant" I found this, but which is the best?
Eh, taberna is good, so is popina. Caupona is more of an inn, someplace where you can stay the night. If there's a table cloth I usually go with taberna, if it's just a quick stop like a sandwich place or burger joint I go with popina. --Ioscius(disp)00:13, 17 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Taberna restaurantiva is just reinventing taberna refectoria.
According to Traupmans's conversational latin and the Oxford Latin dictionary, caupona is the prefered translation for restaurant.
Both caupona and taberna mean inn/tavern, but taberna also means a shop/small store; so you would go to a taberna to buy jewelry but not to a caupona, where you would mostly go to stay the night. Now a taberna refectoria would be a shop were they specialize sell food of some kinds; cauponae apparently were inns with a nice sit-down restaurant or tavern. On the other hand, popina literally means a bistro, cook-shop, like mcdonalds.
Popina is a handy term because it really has no other meaning: it's a place where food is cooked for immediate eating. Its origin, incidentally, is as the Sabine equivalent of the pure-Latin coquina "kitchen". The word was borrowed from Sabine into Latin, some hundreds of years BC, for a kind of establishment that maybe the Sabines made fashionable. Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 09:43, 17 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
For a place like that on the right hand side I think we need a term like taberna refectoria. Popina sounds for me somewhat low end, as Rafael mentioned, I am also not sure whether caupona isn't somewhat popular. Following the different vicipaedias, the modern "restaurant" is an invention of 19th century Paris, before, there was no free choice of meal and no individual service, the defining characteristics of "restaurant". --Alex101111:22, 17 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Hi, can someone help translate the Latin terms "vetus depositio pecuniae" and "jus commune et quasi gentium" that appear in the English Wikipedia article "Treasure trove"? Please reply on that article's talk page. Thanks very much. — JackLee03:34, 18 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I read some references to the expression Treuga Dei, which is supposed to be in Medieval Latin, however, the word "treuga" does not make any sense to me, isn't it tregua correctly? Because tregua is a Romance (Spanish/Italian) word coming from Gothic triggwa that means "treaty". --Mexicanus (scribe!)10:16, 18 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I had this discussion on the English Wikipedia too...all the references I have ever read about the Treuga Dei spell it treuga. Du Cange spells it treuga as well. One medieval author I have handy (Willelmus Tyrensis) spells it treuga. Apparently some Spanish and Italian historians use tregua but I have never personally come across that spelling. Adam Episcopus21:06, 6 Februarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Martial law
Quaeso. Hi guys. I would appreciate help with translation of this wordterm or something like-'under rule by military' or 'rule of(country) under emergency situation' granting the ruler(pretender) dictatorship power'. Like what Darth Sidius/Emperor Palpatine did in Star Wars Gratias ago. --Jondel11:34, 18 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The Romans did not have our concept of "state of emergency" / "martial law" (arguably all Roman law was "martial"), so there is no clear equivalent. There is, however, a very close parallel, which is the appointment of a dictator rei gerundae causa. So "martial law" could be rendered as dictatura or dictatoria potestas. Ius belli on the other hand, is the law of declaring war (called ius ad bellum in modern international law) or of conducting war (modern equivalent: international humanitarian law), not something applying to rules of interior governance / policing. --Ceylon13:07, 18 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I really have no idea about lex belli, Iacobe, I only meant to talk about ius belli. Is there a literary source for lex belli in that sense? I'd find that more convincing than a dictionary.--Ceylon13:50, 18 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Lex belli looks good. Ius ? like rights or justice? hmmm. I'll be using this for Ferdinandus Marcos. How does 'Declaravit legem bellium' sound? I'll check the notre dam latin dictionary for the grammar. In many dicattorships, the dicator blames or secretly creates an emergency or act of terror then declares a state of emergency and martial law. Thanks Jacob and Ceylon.--203.215.115.16 14:52, 18 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)--Jondel14:53, 18 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Definitely, the right term is "ius bellum". In latin, lex means the product of a legislative act. So lex belli would mean the "law of war" or the "law governing how wars should be fought". However "martial law" is outside legislative acts, it is government by decree, or by might of the army, as it might occur during war. The roman concept Ius primarily means rights, but also includes laws of all types, because in the Roman mind the laws were the writing down of rights so that they could be uniformly adjudicated and protected. In the case of martial law what right are we refering to? The right of the military commander to ensure civil order by the use of the army. Ius bellum, by the way, would also include the right to wage war against the enemy.--Rafaelgarcia16:06, 18 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Gratias Rafael. In martial law, IMHO we refer to the right of the leader. The leader assumes power without consent of the constituents on the pretext that a state of war(or emergency) is occuring; often blaming a small incident(which the leader may have secretly created himself). In martial law there is only a pretense of rights being uniformly adjudicated and protected but not in truth. In reality the ruler is a dictator in the English sense. His power is supported by the military. There is no government but military might(the military is the covertly the government ). The dictator creates the law (martial law). --Jondel16:32, 18 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
That is true Jondel, but what you are describing is a very common instance in which martial law is abused. In time of war or a true emergency, then it is justified because the usual mechanisms wouldn't have time to work. --Rafaelgarcia16:51, 18 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Mmmh, since this is not the Volapük Wikipedia I guess we should at least try not to make up our own language. Ius bellum means the law the war, which is neither here nor there. As for declaravit legem bellium, declaro can be used for consuls, kings, victories, but not for laws, and bellium is ungrammatical. Coming back to ius belli, Cicero uses it twice: De leg. 2.34 and De off. 3.107 ("Est autem ius etiam bellicum fidesque iuris iurandi saepe cum hoste servanda"). It clearly means the law of war here, which is far from martial law. Much depends on what context you need it for, Jondel. But standing alone, I would still think dictatoria potestas comes at least a little closer to the concept. --Ceylon17:12, 18 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, you're right. I didn't look at it carefully. I was thinking Ius bellicum = ius belli = right of war. But, fortunately, we are blessed by people such as Ceylon with their heads straight and who know more about Roman history to boot.--Rafaelgarcia17:20, 18 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Please, read again Ceylon's first note. In a situation of a political emergency or distress, dictatoria potestas is certainly the term that comes closest to what is meant by issuing an emergency decree or martial law. --Neander04:53, 19 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I don't disagree with dictatoria potestas as it applies to Caesar's time, but at the same time I'm a little uncomfortable assuming that dictatoria potestas does the job for the modern concept of martial law. Dictatoria potestas would seem to describe anyone who had the power to rule by decree, such as today Hugo Chavez in Venezuela, but we wouldn't describe Venezuela today being under Martial Law....or in an emergency...So I think the issue needs more thought.
As Ceylon himself recognises, there is a difference, perhaps, between assuming dictatorial powers in an emergency and martial law as we have today. By dictatorial powers it is meant ruling by decree, no? And martial law being the enforcement of order by the army. Yet martial law can happen without dictatorial powers being assumed by anyone, for example, if a military commander takes over a flooded city. No one is dictating any law in that instance, it is just that the military commander giving orders to his subordinates who enforce his will at the point of a gun.
On the other hand, in attempting to capture the concept of martial law, Ius Belli would not seem to fit either, if the emergency were a flood that is not war related. . I think we need a term that means "emergency military administration" or "emergency military government" or something close to that.--Rafaelgarcia05:41, 19 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
In that case, if you want to avoid the ambiguity of circumlocution, such as rem publicam (in tempore belli / ob pericula) militibus committere (cf. Liv. 1.27.1) or summam imperii in manibus copiarum ponere, you're probably left with the unenviable option of using a neologism (ius Martiale being as good or bad as any other).--Ceylon09:35, 19 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
If we borrow the term from other languages, why not "lex Martialis" (cf. Loi martiale, Ley marcial, Legge marziale)? Just asking. I'm no expert in juridical matters. --Neander20:15, 19 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The reason for ius rather than lex is that lex in latin has a more specific meaning than in other languages. From what I have read in the dictionary of greek and roman antiquities, the term lex is limited to the product of legislative acts, by e.g. the senate or some other legislative body; ius on the other hand refers not only to laws (leges et plebescita), but also to common law (court traditions in deciding rights, both written and unwritten), and to rights of different kinds. Martial law isn't a lex in that it does not correspond to a legislative act but to an administrative one.--Rafaelgarcia21:32, 19 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
OK. Gratias ago ad Iacobi, Neander Rafael, Ceyolon and others. I will be using 'ius bellum ' and 'dicta dictum est' instead of declaravit. Hence ' Ius bellum dicta dictum est anno 19731972.--Jondel06:21, 21 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Ceylon, hi. Putasne de dictatoria potestas? Accordo namI agree but we have to translate what was openly declared. In truth , most of martial law situations nowadays are dictatorships but we have to use what was declared and not interpretations. If a dictatorship has a word democracy in the name of its nation, we have to translated literaly democracy even if we'd like to insert the translation of the word 'dictatorship' in the name. And so on and so forth. But of course modern translations may have to depart a bit from the old original definitions.Anyway, as Rafael says, lex is a product of a legal authority/body. If need be we can vote to be sure of concensus. --Jondel14:43, 21 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
My only worry was about the grammar: If you want to say 'the law of war', you have to put 'war' in the genitive -> ius belli (ius bellum, as Iacobus has pointed out above, is beautiful law). If you feel uneasy about using dictatoria potestas (although the Latin dictator has a very different meaning from the English derivative), I would still think ius Martiale is a better choice than ius belli.--Ceylon15:18, 21 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
How would one say 'teddy bear' (as in - small stuffed bear-shaped fluffy toy) in Latin? Stupid question, isn't it? Thanks in advance, cheers, Ouro15:46, 18 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Sure, I understand that, but... I've already asked Rolandus (who wrote theodoricus) whence he got that form, and am awaiting a response. In the meantime, let's look at the interwikis: [[:bg:Плюшено мече]] [[:da:Teddybjørn]] [[:de:Teddybär]] [[:es:Osito de peluche]] [[:fr:Ours en peluche]] [[:hr:Plišani medo]] [[:id:Teddy bear]] [[:is:Bangsi]] [[:it:Teddy Bear]] [[:he:דוב צעצוע]] [[:hu:Plüssmackó]] [[:ms:Beruang Teddy]] [[:nl:Teddybeer]] [[:ja:テディベア]] [[:no:Teddybjørn]] [[:pl:Miś (zabawka)]] [[:pt:Urso de pelúcia]] [[:ru:Плюшевый мишка]] [[:simple:Teddy bear]] [[:fi:Teddykarhu]] [[:sv:Nallebjörn]] [[:ta:டெடி கரடிக்குட்டி]] [[:th:หมีเท็ดดี้]] [[:zh:泰迪熊]]. It would seem, then, that Germanic languages favor Teddy+native word for bear, while romance and slavic languages favor the word for bear (sometimes diminutive, sometimes not)+the word for plush. For our part, I think the diminutive makes a great deal of sense (as does, as I have noted, David Morgan). Now plush derives from the vulgar Latin word piluccare, so we would be looking at Ursulus piluccatus, but piluccare actually means "to remove hair" so our teddy would be chihuahuaish! one of the other languages have the semantic "play" in their name for teddy bear, so I wonder whence Morgan got lusorius. I mean the sense is plain enough: ursulus lusorius = little bear with which you play, which is certainly exactly what a teddy bear is.--Ioscius(disp)18:49, 19 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
OHHH! Maybe I do know where Morgan got lusorius... I din't even think of it at first, but my grandma used to call it orso giocattolo or "little play bear"...--Ioscius(disp)18:51, 19 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I wrote those sentences, but I do not think I created them, maybe I have cleaned up some pages and got the text from there. But {{PONS-Egger}} gives: Teddybär ... ursulus panneus, m; vgl. PAUL. NOL., carm., 24, 327; ~ panniceus; vgl. ISID., orig., 19, 22, 24 --Rolandus12:06, 20 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
"Si opus scriptum est in alia lingua, et versionem Latinam non cognovimus, nomen suae linguae utere. (Da versionem post mentionem primam si potes.)"
Therefore, shouldn't all the page titles be in their respective languages with a Latin translation given in the article? (especially since I don't think any films' titles have ever been "officially" translated into Latin) -- Secundus Zephyrus19:18, 19 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
That only applies to written work, ie. opera scripta. For other works the third rule on the same page: "Si opus aliarum artium est neque litterarium (ut sculptura), verte nomen vulgare vel usitatum si potes, et adde nomen originale post mentionem primam" id est Anglice:If the work is not a piece of writing (such as a sculpture), translate the original or usual name if you can, and give the original name after first mention." A movie is not writing so according to the present rules, we try to translate.--Rafaelgarcia22:59, 19 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Hmm, when I wrote that rule I had forgotten about things like television. The original intent was that items with linguistic content should bear the names the author gave them, while items without linguistic content could safely have their names translated. The reasoning is that in a work with linguistic content, the name is part of that content, and anchored to it–the translator may change it substantially when translating the work, so its name in Latin (or any other language) cannot be assumed to follow on from its name in its original language (Ab Urbe Condita does not mean History of Rome, nor does Schiffbruch mit Tiger mean Histoire de Pi). If the work is without other linguistic content, however, the name doesn't have a context relation to any words in the work, but is either a description or a statement of some kind, neither of which would be expected to change substantially when brought into another language. I wrote the rule poorly, but Secundus Zephyrus has interpreted it in the way it was intended. –Mucius Tever01:22, 20 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The quality of things here is very uneven. I wouldn't take anything on any page here as very strong support for anything anywhere else, but let every case stand on what merits it has itself, and hope those merits spread. –Mucius Tever01:22, 20 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Ludi Computatrales are a borderline case; they are not, strictly speaking, works of art so not covered by the rules concerning works of art above. (Of course they do incorporate works as part of the program but they are not art per se.) Because they are comercial software programs, however, their names are trademarks. And for trademarks we don't translate the lemma but often provide a translation in parentheses. (Marca mercatoria non vertenda sunt. Quorum etiam, si potes, adde versionem in parenthesi./Trademarks are not to be translated. Here too, if you can, give a translation.)--Rafaelgarcia01:28, 20 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Do you think they should be in Japanese? And if so, should they be transliterated or not...? Take The Legend of Zelda for example, should the title of the page actually be "ゼルダの伝説" or "Zeruda no Densetsu" or "The Legend of Zelda" or "Fabula Zeldae"? -- Secundus Zephyrus06:27, 20 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Our rule ad minimum is to always transliterate a name even if we don't translate, which is a common enough rule in all wikipedias, and give the original name in parenthesis.
But again there is actually no clear rule here, only that our custom has been to use the english name of the game as the "translitteration", probably because that the english name also universally used in Europe including Rome, presumably. I think this custom should be kept, since it is quite universal across european wikis, but we also include the original japanese name and a translation in parenthesis.--Rafaelgarcia21:13, 20 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Xkoski = Xae torrens?
I don't possess the Kalevala Latina, so I cannot say whether this is consistent throughout the book but from what I was given on Tyrjänkoski (Tyrjae torrens) is it possible for places ending in -koski in Finnish to become gen. + torrens in the Finno-Latin declension system (Anjalae Torrens, Imatrae Torrens etc.)? If he does this regularly in the book of course, that is even better. (Of course I could say Tyrjankoskis in the genitive but Tyrjae torrens is much more latin-looking). On this point, we do not yet have an official page for the declension of Finnish names (just a table and various discussions) and there are also Polynesian and Greek systems which are in use but aren't yet linked at TNP. Harrissimo17:01, 20 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC).[reply]
Re: -koski → -ae torrens – I would probably not recommend it on that example alone. The source is, after all, a work of poetry, so poetical concerns may have figured. Also, I don't know if it makes as much a difference in Finnish as it would in, say, English, but Anjalankoski and Imatrankoski seem to be written as one word, while the Kalevala, if Google is any judge, has Tyrjän koski as two (which would certainly have influenced the translation as well). –Mucius Tever23:27, 20 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The only other is Katrakoski but if he writes Katrae torrens makes it a consistency at least. I think you're right about Tyrja being a special case (it is not called Tyrjankoski in the English translation, but "falls of Tyrya"). But we shall see. Harrissimo23:55, 20 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC).[reply]
Sure enough, Kalevala Latina 3.180 (p. 34): Kaatra torrens Carelorum. Muke does have a point, though, about the demands of meter. --Iustinus21:39, 28 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Then I'll keep towns with -koski intact and translate if I am talking about some actual torrents (which will be very rarely in any case). Thanks for searching, Harrissimo21:58, 28 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC).[reply]
Ex omnibus aliis linguis in Philippinis acceptis usitatissima est Cebuanensis. Literally "Of all the other languages spoken in the Philippines, Cebuano is the most used." (In English, inserting the word "other" in this sentence is an illogicality, but in Latin I think it's OK.) That's my first try. I'll put this on the taberna: others will correct me. Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 16:21, 21 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
That looks fantastic, Well done! Is it possible to change the 'k' to a 'c'? (A lot of people have been confused by this before and Vicipaedia is the official name. Thanks, Harrissimo17:44, 21 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC).[reply]
It does look fantastic... sort of... and there's the matter on the c, which Harrisimo has pointed out. But I was wondering (sorry, I've been out lastly)... has there been any discussion on changing it? last time we had a month long discussion on the "new Pagina Prima". And on the image chosen... I think it is misleading (so it was the Capitoline she-wolf) because we're not a Roman but a Latin wiki... sorry to be the bad guy :(--Xaverius18:13, 21 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I don't want to be negative either -- I like it. But I reverted the formula just temporarily, because I feel it's too confusing to have our name misspelt at the top of the pagina prima. But Ssolbergj's work is all still there in the history, ready to be used! Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 18:46, 21 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The new one is up now... but is everyone happy with Caesar standing there? I don't really know what other sort of symbol you could use to show non-Roman (as well as non-christian) latin. But I'm not complaining myself. Harrissimo19:56, 21 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC).[reply]
I have no problem with the statue...I mean, this Wiki is based on classical Latin, right? I don't see why we should be "politically correct" toward other variations of Latin. The question I have is about the photo itself...the photo isn't copyrighted is it? I just wanted to make sure because I know internet copyright laws are strange, and I don't think it would be in our best interest to be sued. -- Secundus Zephyrus21:40, 21 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Other wikis I've checked don't have an image there, but if an image it is, I like the statue. The invitantur underneath should be made to reappear though. Incidentally, I've always wondered about the Nunc sunt ... paginae. This seems a little vague ("Now there are ... pages" - of what?). Wouldn't Nunc complectitur ... paginas or Adhuc habet ... paginas be nicer?--Ceylon20:10, 21 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Either of what you suggest would be fine, I think. to me, "Adhuc habet ..." sounds the nicer of the three. By "paginae" we really mean "articles" but there was disagreement about which word bests translates "article"; I think either commentarium or commentatio would be more exact.--Rafaelgarcia00:15, 22 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
It is really nice and we have to thank Ssolbergj for his efforts in creating this. However, I wish we could figure out a way to keep the text from getting lost behind the statue--at least that is what is happening for me in firefox and also konqueror. Does that also happen in explorer?--Rafaelgarcia00:01, 22 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Re: "Omnes ut contribuant invitantur!"—Cassell's ait propriam rationem loquendi verbum invitare esse "invitare hominem ad rem," cuius puto formam passivam esse "homo invitatur ad rem," et nostram igitur invitationem melius esse Omnes ad contribuendum invitantur.IacobusAmor00:58, 22 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Ita quidem! Sed interdum ut finali utitur etiam Cicero (sicut de orat. 2,75 cum Hannibal ... invitatus esset ab hospitibus suis, ut eum ... audiret). --Neander02:11, 22 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
lupa
O ademptionem! Lupa nostra fuit carissima cordi meo... non mihi est res maximi monenti qua forma lupa habeat, sed multo careo et desidero lupam nostam bellam redditam fore... Nolite me censere errare fallive, imago etaim melior est priori, at iterum dico lupam symbolum esse mihi delicatum.--Ioscius(disp)06:13, 22 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I like the statue and the lupa. I think the statue is nice on the pagina prima but too assertive to be used as our logo generally. I've just tried putting the lupa in the "porta eruditionis" box as an experiment. I wonder if the lupa could serve as a logo, e.g. on the porta eruditionis pages (now developing), or perhaps elsewhere in Vicipaedia. I don't want to lose her. Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 21:59, 22 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
One of the things about replacing the image of the chalkboard with the wolf is that it doesn't attract visual attention to the Porta... (given the state the Porta is in, that might not be the worst thing... I'm still meaning to hop on that in some form, but the chalkboard was great) --Ioscius(disp)07:01, 23 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I had a similar association ... ;-) — The wolves? The statue looks good and interesting but it is not a specific symbol for Latin either. Could be a symbol for arts or history as well. I liked the wolves a bit more. A bit. ;-) --Rolandus22:27, 22 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Si sentient signum Caesaris nimis gloriosum esse, fortasse summum replum(?)(quod dixit Vicipaedia et despectus in mundum monstrat) servare et lupas restituere possumus? Sed incertus sum signum Caesaris absurde esse pomposum. (If you all feel that Caesar's figure is too ostentatious, perhaps we can keep the top bar (that says Vicipaedia and looks onto the world) and restore the she-wolfs beneath? But I am not sure that the symbol of Caesar is inappropriately pompous.) --Rafaelgarcia00:51, 23 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Coram me mihi placet quomodo pagina prima nunc apparet signo Caesaris supra et lupa in loco Portae Eruditionis. (Personally it pleases me how the pagina prima now appears with Caesar's figure above and the shewolf in the Porta Eruditionis.)--Rafaelgarcia01:00, 23 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I very much like the top bar, it looks great. What about trying the same thing, but with one she wolf in place of the statue? I agree that the statue is a bit too pompous. Nam haud sumus imperatores, immo sumus statu aequales, paresque officio!--Ioscius(disp)07:01, 23 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Alia possibilitas est lupis supra uti et signo Caesaris infra in loco Portae Eruditionis. Caesar, quod sub lupis sit, non tantum pomposum videtur.(Another possibility is to use the she-wolfs above and the figure of Caesar below in the Porta Eruditionis. Caesar, because he would be below the she-wolfs, would not appear so pompous. --Rafaelgarcia03:24, 23 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I have just reverted the she-wolf being put in the top corner because it is not transparent like Caesar (and so it didn't look very good). If somebody knows how and can tell me, maybe I can make it so. Of course, I won't mind if somebody wishes to re-revert - it just looks bad (sententiā meā). Harrissimo22:46, 23 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC).[reply]
I agree that it did not look too good. In order to make the background of the she-wolf image transparent, it would be necessary to edit the image using an image editing program and to reupload it to commons under a different name. --UV23:04, 23 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Egomet censeo et sine imagine iucunde atque summa aequabilitate vivi posse, praesertim cum et ceterae Wikipediae sigla nationalia eaque in prima pagina posita respuere videantur. Semper autem custodiat lupa quasi alma mater Eruditionis portam!--Ceylon06:53, 23 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
De Arabia Saudiana, Google tibi mentitum est. In disputatione de SCDI, vide quaestionem: "'Statunitensis gubernatio et Statunitenses sanitariae ordinationes'? Quod significat hoc mirabile verbum?" IacobusAmor 16:41, 29 Maii 2007 (UTC)" Ha! IacobusAmor01:25, 23 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
"Statunitense" is the italian word for "american" (from "stati uniti"), like "estadounidense" in spanish (from "estados unidos"). So "Statunitense" fits right in with people calling the US "Uniti Status").
One point of view, therefore, is that the preference for the form derived from the Romance languages is understandable because "Americanus" will always suffer from the trouble that "America" is also the name of the rest of the Western Hemisphere.
Yet most people in romance speaking countries only use "Americano" to only mean "cives CFA" anyway, and use a longer phrase to mean the continent and peoples of the Americas. Thus another point of view is that "Status Uniti" really is awful latin for CFA and let just stick with our guns and insist on decent latin, running roughshod over those clinging to their romance language preconceptions.:)--Rafaelgarcia20:46, 22 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
And further, what do south Americans call themselves? Does a guy from Columbia call himself a Columbian or an Americano/sud Americano? A guy from El Salvador Americano or Salvadoreno? North America too... I've never once heard a Canadian call himself American. In English, American can be a substantive for a CFAer, or, if in a different context, an adjective defining a more specific geonym. I agree with Rafael this is a somewhat silly question (though it's not the first time it's been raised), and with all who think that to use a form based off Stati Uniti (from which I personally spent HOURS ridding Vicipaedia...) is barbaric.--Ioscius(disp)20:59, 22 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Well, instead of Status uniti one could use civitates foederatae. In English as in other languages, there is the solution of "US-American", but this is somewhat difficult to render in Latin. As far as I know, in international organisations, in English, they do not say American but US: US-GDP and so on. I also know of some Americans (outside US), who do not want the term "American" for "US". --Alex101123:08, 22 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
"Platica"
Does this word exist in Latin? There is a Spanish word, plática, that means "conversation", and Royal Spanish Academy's Dictionary says that it comes from Latin "platica". Though, I have never seen this word in Latin. May it be a Greek loanword? --Mexicanus (scribe!)21:47, 24 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Tried to look in Corominas' diccionario etimológico but there was no entry for platica. Nevertheless, let me venture a guess. If platica comes from Greek, the appropriate word would be (adj.) platikós which means both 'general' and 'detailed', depending on context; e.g. platike exegesis 'detailed explanation'. Platicus occurs in late Latin as an astrological term, meaning 'general, non respiciens partes minores'. In medieval manuscripts, platicus tends to be confused with placitus, which may indicate something more than only a mechanic lapsus calami. So, maybe platica has resulted, in Hispano-Latin, from a contamination of the two, Greek giving the form, and Latin placitum, the meaning. However, this is all very speculative. --Neander23:55, 24 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I was recently viewing the page for Tokyo (Tocio) and followed the link bursa, which had a link back to Tocio as Tokii which (besides the incorrect form of the word) brings up the question of whether or not to utilize "K" in city and other place names. I realize that the letter was rarely, if ever, used by speakers of Latin, and would like to posit that links either Latinize every place name or, like with authors, artists, et cetera, leave the name the way it was.
In accommodating combinations spelled ke and ki in their original languages (or in their usual romanized transliterations), any Latinization that uses ce and ci is ill-advised because it forces people who speak "church Latin" into mispronunciation, and these may well be the majority of Latin-speakers today (though perhaps not forever). Let's tinker as little as possible with alien proper names! K is a productive letter in modern Latin. IacobusAmor18:52, 25 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Indeed. The objections the Romans raised against K was only that it was superfluous, having the same force of C. In a world where that's no longer necessarily the case, well... –Mucius Tever03:30, 26 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I beg to disagree. K in Latin played about the same role as Digamma or Qoppa in Greek: It was an archaic and obsolete letter, mostly reserved for writing kalendae. Significantly, it was not used for integrating foreign words into Latin (in contrast to Y and Z): Κύπρος was translitterated as Cyprus. That's why this wiki was called Vicipaedia I suppose. As for pronunciation, every Latinist knows that in classical Latin C was pronounced K. If some people consciously choose ecclestiastical pronunciation instead, I don't think pronouncing Tocio like Totchio is more objectionable than pronouncing civis like tchivis.--Ceylon08:19, 26 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Re: It was an archaic and obsolete letter, mostly reserved for writing kalendae. So I thought, but supervacua is the deprecating epithet applied to K (and sometimes Q) by several grammarians including Priscian ("K quidem penitus supervacua est [...] "Carthago" enim et "caput", sive per C sive per K scribantur, nullam faciunt nec in sono nec in potestate eiusdem consonantis differentiam"); the only other reason I find offhand goes with a rule (such as that given by Quintilian) that K is only used in words it is an abbreviation for; Velius Longus says qui K expellunt, notam dicunt esse magis quam litteram.
Re: Significantly, it was not used for integrating foreign words into Latin: Isidore asserts the exact opposite of that advice: Omnia autem Graeca nomina qualicumque sequente vocali per K sunt scribenda. (And of course the Phoenician Karthago was often spelled with K, as Priscian implies above.) A preference for C is certainly of Roman date, but I think the universal use of C instead of K is a relatively recent invention. —Mucius Tever00:50, 27 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Re "K in Latin played."—That was then; this is now. K never died, and it sometimes reappeared in medieval texts where classical texts had C: I've seen the word karitas (not caritas) in many medieval MSS. Alongside the classical tendency to use C for the sound of the velar unvoiced stop stands another principle, perhaps the larger one: that Latinization should disturb non-Latin proper names as little as possible. We often see that concern here, as when we agree not to Latinize surnames de novo. ¶ As for the usefulness of helping church Latinists not mispronounce foreign proper names, it may be relevant that linguists use /k/, not /c/, for the sound of the velar unvoiced glottal. IacobusAmor17:39, 26 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Quid? Nonne hankke litteram valde utilem produktivamque et ad verba Latina skribenda adhibeamus, ne quis ea more ekklesiastiko pronuntiet? :)--Ceylon22:03, 25 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
So how should we be translating and writing in Latin? Should we follow the Ancient Romans or the Latin of the Middle Ages (and/or "Curch Latin")? I am in favor of altering place names as little as possible, but I also understand that this is extremely difficult for most places, as the Romans either didn't know about their names or didn't care, and also in the sense that this wiki has already been dubbed Vicipaedia. My belief is that the names should be recognizable to people with little understanding of the language, how this wiki works, or those who cannot find what they are looking for (as a sidenote, I had particular difficulty in locating Chicago), not only for ease, but also out of respect for other cultures. I suppose that, at the very least, the modern names of the place can be found on the page as well as at the top of the "Quarere". Sapiens2322:58, 26 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Re "I suppose that, at the very least, the modern names of the place can be found on the page as well as at the top of the "Quarere"."—I argued for this some time ago, because (as your plight with Chicago shows) having an indigenous name on a page in addition to the Latin one will assist people using the Quaerere box to find articles; but the prevailing consensus, if I recall correctly, rejected this argument. IacobusAmor17:50, 29 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I wasn't aware of such a consensus. I would always put the "original"/relevant/local/current name on the page, along with whatever Latin name we choose; it's sure to be helpful. Andrew Dalby (disputatio) 18:13, 29 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I've been considering this question and putting together notes on how to solve them (still not much productive to show, yet). Of course for the encyclopedia the correct answer is that a word is treated as foreign (and unaltered, save for transliteration) unless it's already been written about elsewhere in Latin, in which case we should use that spelling (or the best spelling, if there are many options). To deviate from this rule is both to violate NPOV and become The Encyclopedia That Makes Things Up—dreadful fates indeed. As for difficulty in finding, I understand that when the Latin name differs from the common or native one, redirects are encouraged (and I'll put one in for Chicago just now.) —Mucius Tever00:50, 27 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
If we were to apply a commonly cited principle—that we should call people by the names they themselves prefer—then perhaps we'd refer to Charlemagne as Karolus! Vide:
If his biographer Einhard is to be trusted, Charlemagne was virtually illiterate - so this spelling was chosen for him rather than by him. Nor was Latin his mother tongue; his actual name was something like Karl. But since the rules say we should use historical Latinisations where they exist, I would not have a problem with Karolus as long as we keep a redirect.--Ceylon18:20, 29 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Cardinal points
Viciaepaedia so far offers a welter of unsystematic terms for the sixteen most usually cited points of the compass. (1) Could someone provide a standard, systematic set of terms for them? I list the desired ones here:
North
North-northeast
Northeast
East-northeast
East
East-southeast
Southeast
South-southeast
South
South-southwest
Southwest
West-southwest
West
West-northwest
Northwest
North-northwest
For the more complicated ones (e.g., north-northeast), English has a fuller expression (e.g., north by northeast); is that a clue as to how the Latin idiom works?
(2) What's the Latin idiom for statements of the pattern "A is/lies [a certain distance] north of B"? It's especially useful in statements about where villages lie in relation to cities and where little islands lie in relation to big islands. IacobusAmor17:22, 26 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
North, translated either borealis (north star) or septentriones (big dipper),
from Traupmann we have the following idioms: to the north/northward = in septentriones versus or simply septentriones versus; on the north side = a septentrionibus
other possibilities (I think I have seen): towards the north = ad septentriones, or simply accusative depending on the verb, northerly direction: ad septentrionalem partem, a septentrionibus = from the north
South, translated as either meridies (in the northern hemisphere because it means the midday sun) or auster (south wind) generally
East translated as orientis
West translated as occidens
For the other intermediate directions I believe that the romans had separate words standing for the various winds in the sea south of italy: Africus = southwest, Argestes, west-southwest, etc., etc.. Nowadays I don't think these would apply too well. What did the medieval sailors say? This is an important topic, I hope to hear more and will look into it more too!--Rafaelgarcia18:38, 26 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for these terms, but let a comment on "North" stand for a comment on all of them: if that's all Traupmann says, he's failed, because he hasn't told us how to say 'Estonia is north of Latvia'. Estonia est in Latviae septentrionibus? Estonia est in septentrionibus Latviensibus? Estonia est in septentrionibus ab Latvia? (My guess would be the last, but guessing isn't always the best way to go, and maybe some idiom not suggested here would be the best one.) The question remains: what's the idiom? And the secondary question remains: how do we say 'A is north-northeast of B'? Worldwide, the old Latin uses of Mediterranean & southern European winds is irrelevant. There ought to be a systematic way of referring to the sixteen listed points of the compass. Surely sailors in the renaissance and later had some convenient way of naming them? IacobusAmor19:05, 26 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Yes I see and I agree that the the rennaisance sailors must have recorded directions in their stories so the thing to do is find out what they used. My own guess would have been to translate it as "Estonia iacet in septentrionibus Latviae." But, indeed, it would be immensely more satisfactory to see what people actually would say back then.--Rafaelgarcia20:45, 26 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
For the wanted pattern, 'A lies [X miles] north of B', I've found a model sentence for everything but the compass-point: Milia passuum tria ab eorum castris castra ponit 'He pitches his camp three miles from theirs' (Caes. B.G., 1.22.5); that might give us A iacet milia passuum X ab Y 'A lies X miles from Y'. Then would the direction be after a preposition or just in the bare ablative? Using 'north': A iacet milia passuum X [a/in] septentrionibus ab Y 'A lies X miles north of Y'. Is that the idiom? IacobusAmor21:27, 26 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Still no answer but I wanted to add the following relavent snippet from Traupman, who gives the following sentence and translation: "It is north of Canada, which borders the united States on the north. "--"Est supra Canadam, quae attingit Civitates Foederatas Americae a septentrione."Still looking for a source to answer your question....--Rafaelgarcia03:28, 27 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
OK, that (with a correction to attingit) can work for 'north', and then infra can work for 'south', but how do you say 'Montreal is east-northeast of Ottawa'?! IacobusAmor 03:59, 27 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC) (corrected attinguit->attingit above--Rafaelgarcia10:49, 27 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC))[reply]
It gives the winds, as I listed months ago, but then we're stuck with terms like Boreas Scythicus for 'northeast' and Boreas Thracias for 'north-northwest', and what do Scythia and Thrace have to do with Canada? and we're still not using a set of terms as systematic as the English one (as listed above). IacobusAmor03:59, 27 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Well, let me try. Taking no stand to word order, one kind of basic (maximal) pattern would look as follows: A, iacet, [MENSURAACC], ad PLAGAACC, ab BABL. E.g., Estonia [complures passús] ab Latvia iacet ad septentriones (ad septentrionum plagam). But depending on how much info is given in the sentence, on the verbs used (e.g. abest, constituit, &c.), etc., the MENSURA may also be in ablative. Maximal patterns very rarely occur in running texts, so there are surely many textually sensible ways of giving this kind of information in pieces. --Neander03:52, 27 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Hardly anyone writes about going northeast in latin I suppose. Along the way however, I found that the expression "ad septentrionalem plagam" using the adjectival form is the most common, and I found a couple of instances of phrases like "ad septentrionalem plagam Oxoniae" meaning "on the north side of Oxon" where the point of reference is in the genetive rather than with ab+abl.I was thinking maybe Gilbert might be the source to look at but I have to visit the library for that..--Rafaelgarcia11:26, 27 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
From various latin sources on the web mostly papal decrees but also this ::very useful book on botanical latin, it I get the following terms: septentrio-orientalis, meridio-orientalis, austro-orientalis; from this pattern we can form septentrio-occidentalis, boreo-occidentalis, austro-occidentalis.
The book also has an example of usage: "Habitat in parte regionis mediterraneae austro-occidentali, praecipue in Hispania centrali et Lusitania meridionali, ubi occidentem versus abundat."->"It occurs in the south-western part of the Mediterranian region, especially in central Spain and southern Portugal, where towards the west it abounds." --Rafaelgarcia12:22, 27 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Is it really necessary to use a system of 16 directions? Do other wikipedias really say e.g. Luton is north-north-east of London? I think it unlikely that any medieval sailors conversed in Latin. If so they would probably have used the winds (SE Vulturnus, SW Africus, S Auster, NE Aquilo, NW Caurus, N Boreas, E Subsolanus, W Zephyrus). For the 8 principal directions, Georges suggests:
SE - inter meridiem et ortum solis (spectare)
SW - inter occasum brumalem et meridiem (spectare)
NE - inter ortum solis et septemtriones (spectare)
NW - inter septemtriones et occasum solis (spectare)
It is odd, though, that constructions of the type 'A is East / West / North / South of B' seem to be so hard to find in literature. A typical example is Varro, who says Asia iacet ad meridiem et austrum, Europa ad septemtriones et aquilonem, implying the position of the speaker as the point of reference. Thus, we would probably have to say Luton (what's the Latin for Luton anyway?) iacet inter (or: ad) plagas orientalem et septemtrionalem Londinii?--Ceylon12:48, 27 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
According to the English wikipedia, Luton does not lie northeast of London: it lies "32 miles (51 kilometres) north of London" (emphasis added). In other words (some readers might speculate), if you start in London and walk somewhere between NNW and NNE according to the compass, you'll get to Luton. ¶ Whatever we do, we should avoid what the nation of Papua New Guinea has done: its Western Highlands lie eastward of its Southern Highlands and mostly north of its Eastern Highlands, most of its West Sepik Province lies east of a substantial part of its East Sepik Province, its Central Province is in the extreme southeast of New Guinea Island, and its Northern Province lies in almost the extreme south of the country (and entirely east of its Western Province). IacobusAmor14:28, 27 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
It depends from where in London you start. In any case, never forget to look up from your compass when crossing the M25 :)--Ceylon15:25, 27 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Using the Botanical latin construction and the example given by Iacobus and Neander above, we can say the same thing: Luton iacet 40 chiliometra ad plagam boreo-occidentalem Londinii -> Luton lay 40 kilometers to the northwest of london.--Rafaelgarcia13:30, 27 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Here is an attested version closer to Ceylon's more classical usage: Pliny IV 16 30 ex adverso huius situs (the Low Countries) Britannia insula inter septentrionem et occidentem iacet, Germaniae Galliae Hispaniae magno intervalle adversa" from Investigations Representing the Departments: Greek, Latin, Comparative ..by University of CHicago.--Rafaelgarcia13:41, 27 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
From all this (above), we may conclude that the ancients didn't have a need for the universally standard directions that maps for centuries now have been training us to imagine, as with the coordinates of latitude & longitude, given by GPS signals nowadays with unbelievable precision. So Cicero's Latin didn't have a need for sixteen compass points, but ours does! And what shall we use for them? ¶ The most important wind in the Pacific is none of the classical winds: it's the tradewind (trade wind, trade-wind), which blows generally from the northeast in the Northern Hemisphere and the southeast in the Southern Hemisphere, but has particular variants. The standard Sāmoan-English dictionary, for example, defines the Sāmoan term toʻelau as "Prevailing easterly winds which blow from north-east through east to east-south-east from May to October and are commonly known as trade-winds." Note the use of this easterly to include directions varying from NE to ESE. Is there a Latin equivalent to that vagueness (northerly, easterly, southerly, westerly, as opposed to the precision of north, east, south, west)? And how should we translate tradewind anyway? IacobusAmor14:28, 27 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Would we be better advised to avoid the classical winds altogether? Note that Varro (cited above) seems to distinguish between meridiem et austrum, but how?! Would using the actual degrees of the compass work? ("A lies roughly 30 kilometers and 16 degrees from B.") Too bad we can't use clockfaces the way English-speakers do: "A is at two o'clock (from B)!" IacobusAmor14:39, 27 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Borealis and australis literally refer to the winds while septentrionalis and meridionalis refer to the north stars and the sun. However, both terms became universally used for the directions themselves. Meridionalis doesn't make sense in the southern hemisphere because the midday sun is north.--Rafaelgarcia15:22, 27 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Do we really need NNE etc.? Can't we make do with eight compass points, such as NE etc.? If not, any translation with a claim to instinctive intelligibility would have to be rather unwieldy (like potius ad septemtriones vergit quam ad orientem et sim.). Concerning Varro, he seems to have used meridies et austrus as synonyms here.--Ceylon15:25, 27 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Most often we don't have to be so technical and ordinary, less precise locutions will do, but to the address what is a legitimate need for some concepts as Iacobus indicated above here is my attempt to adapt the Botanical latin expressions to suit.
Indicating direction we could say "to the north" as ad borealem or ad borealem plagam or ad borealem versus etc. So in that sense we can write:
North—ad borealem
North-northeast—inter borealem et boreo-orientalem <-> ad borealem-boreo-orientalem
Northeast—ad boreo-orientalem
East-northeast—inter orientalem et boreo-orientalem<-> ad orientalem-boreo-orientalem
East—ad orientalem
East-southeast—inter orientalem et austro-orientalem
Southeast—ad austro-orientalem
South-southeast—inter australem et austro-orientalem<->ad australem-austro-orientalem
South—ad australem
South-southwest—inter australem et austro-occidentalem<->ad australem-austro-occidentalem
Southwest—ad austro-occidentalem
West-southwest—inter occidentalem et austro-occidentalem<->ad occidentalem-austro-occidentalem
West—ad occidentalem
West-northwest—inter occidentalem et boreo-occidentalem<-> ad occidentalem-boreo-occidentalem
Northwest—ad boreo-occidentalem
North-northwest—inter borealem et boreo-occidentalem<-> ad borealem-boreo-occidentalem
And of course there are the suitable substitutions for north and south: septentrionalem and meridionalem. And depending on the expression one can substitute the noun itself for the adjective form. I just didn't want to write too much.--Rafaelgarcia15:48, 27 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
exemplum
In commentario Uvea, videmus hanc sententiam: "Uvea iacet 240 km in aquilone Futunae et Alofiorum." In the light of our discussion, how do we suggest fixing it? For a similar kind of opening (that is, with fuller variants listed after the commonest version), though it doesn't involve the glottal-stop question, see Maria Guyart. This way of listing variants seems quite in keeping with what Vicipaedia has been doing all along. Therefore, with ʻOkina (vide "Glottal-stop question" infra), perhaps we should make the changeover to option (2). Let's leave it for a couple of days and see what (if anything) various others propose. IacobusAmor19:18, 27 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
In this case I think we can do it precisely and succintly: "Uvea iacet 240 km ad boreo-orientem Futunae et Alofiorum." or vaguer, longer, more colloquial, and perhaps nicer: "Uvea iacet 240 km inter septentriones et orientem versus ab Futuna et Alofiis." --Rafaelgarcia20:06, 27 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Since your sentence is pretty close to what Pliny tried to say, I would venture: Uvea insula 240 fere chiliometra abest a Futuna et Alofiis, sita inter septentriones et solis ortum.--Ceylon21:23, 27 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Yes I think your version is nicer. Less precise, more colloquial, more concrete, in latin is nicer. The more precise expression from botanical latin admittedly hurts the eyes a bit, and the ears.--Rafaelgarcia22:08, 27 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I gather the 'botanical' style will come in handy when directions are needed in attributive (as opposed to predicative) form: Africa austro-occidentalis is more practical than ea Africae pars quae ad meridiem solisque occasum spectat.--Ceylon06:52, 28 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
According to the book Botanical Latin, I think that is how the botanical nomenclature was originally intended. Although that same nomenclature could be adapted to navigation purposes, perhaps like what I described above, to translate phrases like X is a wind moving south-southwest at 50km/h.-> X est ventus qui inter plagas australem et austro-occidentalem 50km/h afflat.--Rafaelgarcia15:40, 28 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
corsair, privateer (government authorized pirate or harasser of enemy ships) cursarius, i+ m. (Ducange; Niermeyer; Latham; Ducrue 258: "accidit enim frequentissime ut illae orae maritimae continuis Africanorum excursionibus infestentur. Hos inter cursarios etiam praedictae naves fuere")
Polynesian (and other) languages have a consonant usually described as a glottal stop. The Hawaiian (and now English) word for it is ʻokina. Would Vicipaedians prefer to see an article on it starting (1) "ʻOkina est. . . ." or (2) "Okina, subtilius ʻokina, est. . . ."? That is, should this consonant always be kept in Latin transliterations? or should it be cited only as a more precise alternative? Naturally, it occurs in placenames, so the problem is unavoidable. So far, as I've been experimenting, it seems reasonable to ignore the indigenous macron, since Latin itself (pace nostro Avito) tended to ignore its own long vowels, but possibly to keep the ʻokina, because it's a specific phoneme, often required to distinguish between words (for example, Samoan loʻu 'my' vs. lou 'your'). And since the Hawaiian alphabet has only thirteen letters (not the twenty-six of the standard modern roman alphabet), it seems a shame to deprive it of even one of them! Of course if we decide to keep the ʻokina, somebody will have to go back & change Havaii to Havaiʻi in numerous places. ¶ This question is not without an important practical implication: any word that starts with an ʻokina and turns up in an automatically alphabetized list (as happens with categoriae) is going to be grouped with other such words at the end of the alphabet. You can check this yourself in Categoria:Linguistica. That might be a good argument for option (2) above. Another one would be that the old Roman writers would almost certainly have ignored the glottal stop, and they may not even have noticed it when they heard it. IacobusAmor16:27, 27 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I would think that (2) is the superior alternative for precisely the reasons you list above. I can't think of any harm that would come from adopting (2) but there are a couple of instances of harm /annoyance that would result from (1), especially if such a practice were extended to languages like korean(with a silent consonant) and chinese(with many characters for the same sound and complicated accents). I guess the standard should be: what would a normal writer do when writing day to day to fellow latin colleagues who don't necessary know much about a topic.--Rafaelgarcia17:57, 27 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Rafael, in line with your thinking, I've experimentally recast the article Uvea to match the pattern of (2) above, by getting rid of the initial glottal stop and thereby making Vicipaedia's machinery alphabetize the name under U, not after Z. Will others give a thought to whether "Uvea, accuratius ʻUvea" is the best practice for these names? There are nontrivial numbers of them in Oceania! IacobusAmor18:50, 27 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
It seems nice to me the way you did it. (The problem, by the way, with Chinese names can be quite severe. Because of the problem, the last couple of years the physics journals in the US allowing Chinese authors to include their names in character form within parentheses in the author list.) --Rafaelgarcia20:12, 27 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Littera S Latina
Do you have any linguistic source for the statement that Latin S had a palatalized sound (like in Spanish and North Italian)? Gratias! --Mexicanusscribe!18:39, 27 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Maybe that fonetically it is not the proper expression, but traditionally it is said that Castilian Spanish has a palatalized S that sounds like between the English "s" and "sh" sound, just like in many other European languages (Greek, Finnish, Dutch, Swedish, etc.). --Mexicanusscribe!13:22, 28 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Having seen some spanish movies I can verify the s spoken by Castillians is somewhat between an sh and an s; pronunciations vary by region however. --Rafaelgarcia14:28, 28 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Exactly, though it is not an exclusive property of Castillian Spanish, there are also regions is Mexico where it is pronounced between s and sh, and also I think in Perú and Ecuador it is pronounced like that (it is said, because those areas where the center of Spanish Colonial Imperium and the most educated people from Castille were taken there). --Mexicanusscribe!17:06, 28 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Xaverius: Exactamente como tú la pronuncias en Madrid, es la [s] palatalizada (más correctamente: apicoalveolar), que obviamente difiere de la [s] predorsodental que se pronuncia en francés e inglés, aunque no llega a articularse como [ ʃ ] (sh del inglés). --Mexicanusscribe!18:19, 28 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The /s/ used in Spain is usually referred to as "apical," meaning that it is made with the very tip of the tongue (IPA [s̺]). It's not palatal, though it does have a sound somewhat similar to the alveolo-palatal [ ʃ]. --Iustinus21:34, 28 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I have never noticed any difference between the /s/ from Spain and elsewhere... I'll try to pay mor atention next time. I knew that the /d/ in Castillian Spanish is different from /d/ elsewhere.--129.67.125.130 22:48, 28 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)--Xaverius22:53, 28 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
It depends also on the individual perception. Probably you aren't able to hear the difference because you pronounce it this way. But a person who pronounces the "s" like in English or French, or American Spanish, will note the difference between their and your pronunciation. :) --Mexicanusscribe!09:18, 29 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
No I speak English what I ment was that I wasn't aking if I could comunicate in English I think it better that it be in Latin so that those who don't speak English may know Latin can understand. What I meant was that Anglicam in "Possum uti Amglicam" (and now I realize I left out the -ne I'm not sure if "Quippe potes lingua anglica uti..." was a joke) was a substantive meaning the English Template. I tried it and it didn't work but it is rather simple and I'll simply do what it was intended to be in the Article without a template.Commment 04:09, 31 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I have trouble understanding both your english and latin. "Quippe potes lingua anglica uti" means "Certainly you can use the english language". "Possum uti Amglicam" makes no sense. It means "I can make use english something". Although, given your english sentences above, I'm not sure you can uderstand what I am writing right now...What is your native language?--Rafaelgarcia04:16, 31 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
My native Language is English. I know that "Possum uti Anglicam" means "I can use English something". But the Question mark should have indicated I meant "Possumne uti Anglicam" Which means "Can I use the English Something?" The Something in this case is the English template which I asked about in the first comment. Since I asked if there was a Latin one I thought it would make sense to use a substantive since in Enlgish I could easily have said "Can I use the English one?" And I don't know the Latin word for Template. I wasn't sure if The Template would cross over the language pages. So, I was asking litterally if I was capable of using it. But I tried and it didn't work. However, it is easy to simply write in what the template does since it creates a Simple Line of text with a Bullet point before it.Commment 04:35, 31 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Utor means "I serve myself" I "Possumne uti Anglicam" is totally ungrammatical. "Possumne anglica re uti" would at least be grammatically correct meaning "Can I use an english thing" or literally "Can I serve myself with an english thing." Anyway you can simply indicate the source you are using as a source at the bottom of the page in question and accomplish the same thing as what you template would do. --Rafaelgarcia04:51, 31 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
After rereading the exchange I figured out what you are asking: Can you use the english template? I guess the answer is: I suppose so, if you create one, but given your beginner's knowledge of latin why don't you just try your best in creating an article and put a {{tiro}} template on it. No offense, but probably someone is going to have to completely rewrite what you contribute anyway. --Rafaelgarcia04:27, 31 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Sorry I realize now that utor, uti takes the Ablative. That was probably a cause for confusion. Well, I have translated a rather small article about a Catholic Saint from the English page which I could get up some time tommorrow. If you want you could take a look at it and tell me if you think it is worth me attempting anything more. Commment 05:11, 31 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Never mind I realize that although it is a some what common practice, the GFDL license's terms cannot be followed concerning translations for wikipedia as the history page for the previous Article cannot be dupicated within wikipedia. So, the issue is moot.
Where does it say that if you translate an article you have to attach a new copy of the translated page's history? It seems obvious to me that a translation isn't a copy. Also ever hear of making a link? If there was an issue would wikipedia have a project dedicated to translating its pages?--Rafaelgarcia08:08, 1 Februarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Licentiae
Cogito necesse esse mutare "Nobis etiam spondes te esse ipsum horum verborum scriptorem primum, aut ex opere in "dominio publico" exscripsisse. NOLI OPERIBUS SUB IURE DIVULGANDI UTI SINE POTESTATE!" ut conplectat copyleft(nescio Latinam) licentias quod volo facere illud ac legale est.Commment 02:43, 31 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I'm goona put this in English because I don't don't the Latin for copyright but how about a Lain equivalent of "You agree that you are not violating copyright laws and to publish you content under GFDL."Commment 03:23, 31 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Right now it says NOLI OPERIBUS SUB IURE DIVULGANDI UTI SINE POTESTATE!->"don't use works under copyright unless you have permission" Why is this not sufficient? We do not wish to publish original content so that GDFL is irrelevant.--Rafaelgarcia03:51, 31 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Quod quoque inquit, "Nobis etiam spondes te esse ipsum horum verborum scriptorem primum, aut ex opere in "dominio publico" exscripsisse." => "And also you promise yourself to be the actual first author of these words, or to be writing from a work in the Public Domain." Si utor litteras in copyleft Licentia ast quae sunt de Justo Uso, mentior. Vero, GDFL est alienus de his litteris. Non contemplavi id esse super, cogito.Commment 04:25, 31 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Because it also says, "Nobis etiam spondes te esse ipsum horum verborum scriptorem primum, aut ex opere in "dominio publico" exscripsisse." => "And also you promise yourself to be the actual first author of these words, or to be writing from a work in the Public Domain." If I use a work in a Copyleft License or which is Fair Use, then I'm lying. Yes, the GDFL is irrevlevant to this statement. I think I didn't notice that it was above [the text I was refering to].Commment 04:41, 31 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Sorry the de in "quae sunt de Justo Uso" shouldn't have been there I think I rewrote the sentence and never removed it.
Right now the whole text says:"Nota bene omnia contributa divulgari sub GNU Free Documentation License (vide singula apud Vicipaedia:Verba privata). Nisi vis verba tua crudelissime recenseri, mutari, et ad libidinem redistribui, noli ea submittere.Nobis etiam spondes te esse ipsum horum verborum scriptorem primum, aut ex opere in "dominio publico" exscripsisse. NOLI OPERIBUS SUB IURE DIVULGANDI UTI SINE POTESTATE!" ->Note well that all contributions are to be published under the GDFL license. Don't submit your work, if you don't wish that it be cruelly edited, changed and freely distributed. You also promise us that you are the first writer of these words, or are writing from a work in the public domain. DONT USE WORKS UNDER COPYRIGHT WITHOUT PERMISSION!". I think the intent is that a sentence or two of text within quotation marks under fair use is allowed under the above. You are only promissing that any translation is your own and also allowed under the usual rules. Specifically the rule is referring to what *you* are writing outside of presenting a quotation. Nevertheless it wouldn't hurt to add a phrase saying "Nobis etiam spondes te esse ipsum horum verborum scriptorem primum, aut ex opere in "dominio publico" vel in dominio GDFL Wikipediano exscripsisse, aut sub usus iusti iure verbis laudatis inter signa uteris."--Rafaelgarcia05:35, 31 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
On second thought I don't think there is any need to change anything in the wording. As long as you cite your sources and don't violate copyrights or commit plagiarism, it is obvious from what is written that translating a wikipedia page is not only allowed but encouraged, as is quoting. Look at our front page.--Rafaelgarcia14:53, 31 Ianuarii 2008 (UTC)[reply]
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