Lesson 8 Conversational Latin Course Cursus Linguae Latinae

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Published 2010-08-05
latinum.org.uk/
Latinum Latin Course
This is a self-contained Latin course.
No textbook is required.
0001 is the first lesson.

Cursus Linguae Latinae
Latin Language Course
拉丁语言课程
ラテンコース
latin kurssi
Cours de Langue Latine
Lecciones Lengua Latina
Latein-Sprachkurs
уроки латинского языка
라틴 언어 수업
دروس اللغة اللاتينية
ללמוד לטינית - שיעורי הלטינית
拉美的教訓

All Comments (16)
  • @nelliemom19
    I've been using your Adler lessons on latinum for 3 months. I really like these videos. THANK YOU so much.
  • @TheAckademie
    I'd just like to thank you a lot for this course - it's been so useful in helping me learning Latin!
  • Thanks a lot for your magnific work. Excellent class and examples. Latin can be spoken correctly if the grammar rules are duly learned, and there is only way to memorize the words and the structure of the language, and that is by speaking, repeating until one. can master the basic structures so that one can go ahead. I am Brazilian, and my language is Portuguese, which comes from Latin. Latin was taught at our schools at the primary, junior and secondary levels, and it was abolished.
  • @Seer24328
    i've always got your "charta" as "cahartha", which confused me a lot, thought never seen a word like that! i think it's better to add some text in the video, so that the learners may take notes without error.
  • @gsjaeger
    Note, 4:37 into the video a black pen is called a white pen (probably because of anticipating too much the white paper that follows)
  • @MrLiq762
    Thanks for your videos, they are realy useful, but i think who wants to follow you should has basic knowledge about Latin, i am lucky that i know a little grammar, so can you give a list of the words, because some time i can not find out how to spell the words.
  • @PATRICKSMITH1
    So it is similar to the greek X? I am a Scouser - this is a nice and easy one for me :)
  • @runningmashup
    I´m Brazilian this language is pretty familiar to me. It looks like something that I forgot for a long time hehe
  • @nielsheurlin
    Niels Molendinario SPD (gratias ago). Certe literae DD longiores sunt litera D, sed pagina XI in Sidnis libro Allanis scriptum est pronuntiationem de SS ut in vocabulo Britannio bus-service esse. Ergo comprehendo verbum addō ut ad-dō dicendum esse. Cogito inter dd spatium (parvum) sinendum esse. Lege paginam et postea dice, quid credis. Denuo me piget mendorum meorum. Salve
  • @nielsheurlin
    Niels Molendinario salutem dicit. Nonne scis verbum 'Boot' [boːt] est germanicum, non britannicum? Certe oo lingua britannica ut neque Ō neque O sed Ū dicitur. Cur fata es litteram O postremam non esse longam. Certe est. Verbum addō est divisum in syllabas duas, hoc omnes sciunt, sed vox tua non litteras DD utria fatur, sed ut unam litteram dicebas ADO. ['a.dɔ] ais. Me piget mendorum meorum. Salve
  • @nielsheurlin
    Molendinario salutatem dicit. Forget about the CH sound, it makes no difference in most cases. The difference lies between aspirated and non-aspirated, and most people can seldom here the difference. "CH As c in emphatic pronunciation of English cat" - Allen. It's especially your pronunciation of vowels I find to be problematic. Clearly ADDŌ ends with a long O, which should be pronounced as O in Boot in German. You're pronouncing it as were it ADO with one D and a short O?
  • @nielsheurlin
    CH = c as in "cat" in English. But honestly I doubt that there really is a difference in the pronunciation and believe the Romans just pronounced it as a simple C. Don't trust the Roman Grammarians! Apart from that I'm wondering if you know enough to be teaching others? Your vowels are anything but Classical Latin; Church Latin if anything. I was watching your video with the alphabet and I believe you only pronounced a handful correctly! ad-dō not ado! You seem 2 lack a lot of basic knowledge!