Saturday, December 15, 2007
Ultima Verba
Thank you all for a wonderful semester---I learned as much as you did, and I cannot wait to come back and do it all over again next semester!
Gotta go---I will be in Greece from 12/17 to 01/06, but I will check e-mail at least once daily; if you have any questions that can be answered quickly over e-mail don't hesitate to write; if you need something more elaborate, for which I will have to do research in my archives, it will have to wait until January.
Valete Carissimae Carisssimique!!!
Magistra Vestra
Thursday, December 6, 2007
MAJOR ANNOUNCEMENT about the get-together
Sorry for the caps, but in a second you'll understand...
Prof. M is going to be too busy grading papers and doing very important things tomorrow, Friday, December 7th. I've also gotten several e-mails from people wanting a time change or saying that they could not come at all but really wished they could. So we will NOT be getting together tomorrow at Ciccio & Tony's at 1pm for lunch. I've told as many people as I could find following the Latin 3 exam today, so I hope that through the blog and through people who have heard, the word will get around. If you read this and see or can contact anyone else who was planning to attend, please let them know that it is cancelled in case they would not check the blog. I would hate for people to show up only to wonder why no one else has.
Strictly speaking though our get-together isn't cancelled... merely rescheduled for the first Friday of the Spring Semester. Same place. Take note! We can move the time to later in the day, for dinner instead of lunch, if Prof. M has classes in the middle of the day on Fridays in the Spring... But more details on that later.
I'm sorry for any inconvenience this might cause...
~Rachael
Prof. M is going to be too busy grading papers and doing very important things tomorrow, Friday, December 7th. I've also gotten several e-mails from people wanting a time change or saying that they could not come at all but really wished they could. So we will NOT be getting together tomorrow at Ciccio & Tony's at 1pm for lunch. I've told as many people as I could find following the Latin 3 exam today, so I hope that through the blog and through people who have heard, the word will get around. If you read this and see or can contact anyone else who was planning to attend, please let them know that it is cancelled in case they would not check the blog. I would hate for people to show up only to wonder why no one else has.
Strictly speaking though our get-together isn't cancelled... merely rescheduled for the first Friday of the Spring Semester. Same place. Take note! We can move the time to later in the day, for dinner instead of lunch, if Prof. M has classes in the middle of the day on Fridays in the Spring... But more details on that later.
I'm sorry for any inconvenience this might cause...
~Rachael
Wednesday, December 5, 2007
Another One hahaha
I dont know about everyone else but we definitly need to get together and study for this exam. I hope Professor M. takes Mercy on us and we all get A's. All I want for Christmas is an A in Latin and NO exam. Also, can someone let me know where this restaurant is, and is a greek flavor or what...mmmm Hummus.lol
Tuesday, December 4, 2007
Studying + Latin= Fun?
Well, it can be. I found an awesome site that is great for practicing and reviewing Latin. It's the Wheelock's (the book Prof. M. always copies the handouts from) Latin exercises website. It's a great interactive website that offers various practice exercises that target areas like: vocabulary, declensions, conjugations, reading comp, parsing words and...(drumroll please) a Latin crossword puzzle! It's great for beginning level Latin through advanced level. I like it and if you're continuing on to more Latin classes next semester it would be a great refresher course. Enjoy!
Here's the link:
http://web.uvic.ca/hrd/latin/wheelock/index.htm
-Anne
Here's the link:
http://web.uvic.ca/hrd/latin/wheelock/index.htm
-Anne
Monday, December 3, 2007
Latin Get-Together Details
As per Prof. M's request, I'm attempting to organize a get-together.
When: Friday, December 7th at 1pm
Where: Ciccio & Tony's, located at 16019 Tampa Palms Blvd W. Tampa, FL 33647 if you'd like to mapquest it. It is not at all hard to find, don't worry...
I guess if Prof. M would like to, like last time, for people who need rides from school, we could meet at 12:30 at her office in Cooper. Would this be alright?
Please, RSVP if you can.
I hope to see many of you there!
~Rachael
When: Friday, December 7th at 1pm
Where: Ciccio & Tony's, located at 16019 Tampa Palms Blvd W. Tampa, FL 33647 if you'd like to mapquest it. It is not at all hard to find, don't worry...
I guess if Prof. M would like to, like last time, for people who need rides from school, we could meet at 12:30 at her office in Cooper. Would this be alright?
Please, RSVP if you can.
I hope to see many of you there!
~Rachael
Sunday, December 2, 2007
because it's there...
Ha! after wondering for a semester how Rachael did it (Rachael, I know I asked you but i didn't understand your instructions and was embarassed to ask again!) I have finally done it myself! Ladies and gentleman, my first very own youtube posting!
This is not exactly Latin, but then again everything is Latin: the artist who composed this popular tango is Spanish and so are the lyrics to the original song. This song is so popular, it has its own entry in Wikipedia (so much for what I considered my own refined and rare tastes...). According to Wiki,
"It has been performed by numerous tango orchestras and lately is commonly featured in films and television not only because of its undisputed quality but also for its free copyright after Gardel and Le Pera's 50 years death. Tango scenes with "Por una Cabeza" appear in Episode 37 of Nip/Tuck, as well as in Schindler's List, Scent of a Woman [1],Delicatessen (film) [2],True Lies[3], All the King's Men (2006 film), Bad Santa, and Episode 9 of Sweet Spy (2005 Korean drama)."
I youtubed them all, and the one attached here is by far the best rendition of both the song and the dance, not to mention the actors (you got to love Al Pacino!).
This is not exactly Latin, but then again everything is Latin: the artist who composed this popular tango is Spanish and so are the lyrics to the original song. This song is so popular, it has its own entry in Wikipedia (so much for what I considered my own refined and rare tastes...). According to Wiki,
"It has been performed by numerous tango orchestras and lately is commonly featured in films and television not only because of its undisputed quality but also for its free copyright after Gardel and Le Pera's 50 years death. Tango scenes with "Por una Cabeza" appear in Episode 37 of Nip/Tuck, as well as in Schindler's List, Scent of a Woman [1],Delicatessen (film) [2],True Lies[3], All the King's Men (2006 film), Bad Santa, and Episode 9 of Sweet Spy (2005 Korean drama)."
I youtubed them all, and the one attached here is by far the best rendition of both the song and the dance, not to mention the actors (you got to love Al Pacino!).
Nunc Est bibendum, nunc pede libero pulsanda est tellus...
Salvete Omnes Carissimae Carissimique, excellentes discipuli!
Boy, can you tell I am in a mood? I cannot believe the semester is over---one more time beginning Latin, one more time all new and as if never done before...as Horace exhorts in the title of this message, now it is time to drink, now it is time to dance with free feet. We did this Ode in Latin III, it was written when Octavian defeated Cleopatra at Actium...remember how he finishes though, with that respect for the queen who chose to take her own life rather than be humiliated in Octavian's triumph.
So, all this by way of saying that I will be free this Friday for lunch (I don't think we can do something earlier, given the fact that we have to be in class at 1 and then at 2), so, Rachael, since you are the master of the ceremonies here, please put as together. Do you want to go to that place we went in the summer? It's not exactly Mediterannean, but it's pretty decent. I have a feeling we won't be entertained like the court of the Roman emperor Heliogabalus, who allegedly had 3 tons of rose petals shower his guests (here shown in a painting by Alma-Tadema, whom I adore). But since we carry the Roman world within, we will have a feast wherever we go! Latin is the ultimate movable feast.
Vestra,
E.
Thursday, November 29, 2007
People have been missing out
So, I just remembered that there was a Latin blog today and that I had never checked it out...BOY HAVE I BEEN MISSING OUT! And so is anyone else who hasn't looked into it. I went back and looked at some of the posts from like September when we started doing subjunctives. *ugh* The subjunctive chart that Dr. Manolaraki posted would have helped me SO much! Well, I guess it's better to have stumbled upon this now than never at all. But, seriously, it's an awesome blog site with so much fun Latin information---New + Old. It's good to see that there is a community of people out there who have a mutual respect for, what is in my opinion, the most difficult but rewarding language out there. I think we can all agree that there is this indescribable sense of satisfaction and accomplishment when you actually translate something difficult correctly!
-Anne L.
PS. Rachael, I had no idea how artistically talented you are. I was actually admiring the plaque in Dr. M's office today, totally unaware that you had created it. It caught my attention bc Minerva is my favorite of the ancient gods. Anyway, it's awesome. (I say awesome a lot.)
-Anne L.
PS. Rachael, I had no idea how artistically talented you are. I was actually admiring the plaque in Dr. M's office today, totally unaware that you had created it. It caught my attention bc Minerva is my favorite of the ancient gods. Anyway, it's awesome. (I say awesome a lot.)
Tuesday, November 27, 2007
Latin Get-Together
While I'm thinking about it...
Been talking to some of last year's Latin 1 students and we want to try to get together for lunch or something sometime before the end of the semester... Maybe on the weekend before Finals Week? I dunno... Sometime before everyone starts going back to their own hometowns for the holidays certainly... But I want to get the ball rolling on discussing this, so... What does everyone think about this?
~Rachael
Been talking to some of last year's Latin 1 students and we want to try to get together for lunch or something sometime before the end of the semester... Maybe on the weekend before Finals Week? I dunno... Sometime before everyone starts going back to their own hometowns for the holidays certainly... But I want to get the ball rolling on discussing this, so... What does everyone think about this?
~Rachael
I've been following the WGA strike. And today, pictures were posted of a fake exorcism of the studios, staged by a groupd of horror tv writers... Pictures here.
They dressed up like nuns and priests and had incense, bullhorns, strike signs and copies of the Rituale Romanum exorcism...
LOL!
~Rachael
Addendum: There's video too...
No Latin in it (::sad face::), but they do read something that is mostly a translation from the Latin ritual (with a few strike-related additions) and they are total dorks in the most wonderfully geeky way...
They dressed up like nuns and priests and had incense, bullhorns, strike signs and copies of the Rituale Romanum exorcism...
LOL!
~Rachael
Addendum: There's video too...
No Latin in it (::sad face::), but they do read something that is mostly a translation from the Latin ritual (with a few strike-related additions) and they are total dorks in the most wonderfully geeky way...
Monday, November 26, 2007
Another Blog for G-Hos
Hey everyone. I was just wondering if anyone loves latin like I do. I honestly look forward to going to class EVERYDAY and seeing my friends.Holla back if ya feel me.lol im dumb i know
Wednesday, November 21, 2007
Ancient find in Rome
I just saw on the internet that archeologists have found an underground grotto that the ancient Romans believed was the place where a mother wolf nursed the founder of Rome, Romulus and his twin Remus.
They have been checking it out for 2 years, they have had to use small cameras because it is partially caved in and they are afraid it will collapse the rest of the way if they try to dig it out.
Here's the link http://www.cnn.com/2007/TECH/science/11/20/birth.of.rome.ap/index.html
Hope everyone has a relaxing Thanksgiving. See you Monday.
Tracy
They have been checking it out for 2 years, they have had to use small cameras because it is partially caved in and they are afraid it will collapse the rest of the way if they try to dig it out.
Here's the link http://www.cnn.com/2007/TECH/science/11/20/birth.of.rome.ap/index.html
Hope everyone has a relaxing Thanksgiving. See you Monday.
Tracy
Tuesday, November 13, 2007
Gregs Blog
Latin is a tough but essential class in my schedule. Mrs. Manolarki makes the material easy to learn. I am definitly happy that i took this class rather than another foriegn language
Saturday, November 10, 2007
More Supernatural Latin...
This time it's a ritual to raise a spirit from the dead...
But first a little background so the scene will make a bit more sense. The woman with Sam and Dean in this scene is named Bela. She's a thief who specializes in stealing artifacts that have occult applications. Sam and Dean really kind of hate her, and in a previous episode, she shot Sam in the shoulder... which did not make them like her any more than they already didn't... But the boys, having been raised right, can't just let her die when the ghost of a dead sailor targets her. The ghost is also why the brothers are in town because people have been dying after seeing a ghost ship in the harbor at night. He kills by making people drown... kind of from the inside out, as you'll see in the video. The reason he's after Bela is that she stole his hand, which had been cut off and turned into a hand-of-glory after he was hanged at sea by his own brother. Bela, it seems, has also killed someone in her family and that's the *real* reason she's being targetted by the ghost... that's why everyone the ghost has killed was targetted. They all spilled family blood... But Sam has an idea that might save Bela's life and end the killings for good... and he needs the magical power of Latin to do it... :D
And because this episode was a lot of fun, secondary non-Latin-type-stuff:
~Rachael
But first a little background so the scene will make a bit more sense. The woman with Sam and Dean in this scene is named Bela. She's a thief who specializes in stealing artifacts that have occult applications. Sam and Dean really kind of hate her, and in a previous episode, she shot Sam in the shoulder... which did not make them like her any more than they already didn't... But the boys, having been raised right, can't just let her die when the ghost of a dead sailor targets her. The ghost is also why the brothers are in town because people have been dying after seeing a ghost ship in the harbor at night. He kills by making people drown... kind of from the inside out, as you'll see in the video. The reason he's after Bela is that she stole his hand, which had been cut off and turned into a hand-of-glory after he was hanged at sea by his own brother. Bela, it seems, has also killed someone in her family and that's the *real* reason she's being targetted by the ghost... that's why everyone the ghost has killed was targetted. They all spilled family blood... But Sam has an idea that might save Bela's life and end the killings for good... and he needs the magical power of Latin to do it... :D
And because this episode was a lot of fun, secondary non-Latin-type-stuff:
~Rachael
Wednesday, November 7, 2007
Exorcism: Serious Business
As Socrates said a while back, "the more I know, the more I realize how little I know." I started thinking about that movie, next thing I know I find out that there are two kinds of exorcisms, deprecatory and imprecatory. What Dean does is an imprecatory (direct) exorcism, which the Catholic church specifically forbids for lay persons, according to this information. Clearly, not only did he not pay attention to Latin class, but he took upon himself the task of an ordained priest! Check it out, it also has a Latin formula (danger: do NOT try this at home--hear me, Rachael?). I am attaching here the most shocking scene of the movie---the exorcisms in which are in English. That was my only disappointment with Father Karras, he didn't seem to know any Latin!
Exorcism
There are two common kinds of exorcisms. Deprecatory and Imprecatory. Lay people should not do public imprecatory exorcisms.
Note: There is some disagreement about whether it is OK to give a devil a direct command in the name of Jesus (i.e., "Satan I command you in the name of Jesus to leave me") when it is dealing with our own person or our family. The Vatican web site contains no information about this, nor does the Catechism or Otto's Fundamentals of Catholic Dogma. If the Magisterium (Pope's office) issues any kind of statement or directive on this I will post it. I have heard compelling arguments on both sides. Personally, until I hear otherwise I will ask Jesus to deliver me rather than talk directly to the bad guy.
Deprecatory Exorcism
The first kind of exorcism is called a deprecatory exorcism (for example the Lord's Prayer) where we ask God, his angels and Saints to cast out the evil one. This does not involve a direct command to the devil. This is the only kind of exorcism which lay people should perform. The Church encourages us to do this. One of the best is the prayer of St. Michael the Archangel:
ST. MICHAEL THE ARCHANGEL
(Latin Version) Sancte Míchael Archángele, defénde nos in proélio contra nequítiam et insídias diáboli esto præsídium. Imperet illi Deus, súpplices deprecámur: tuque, princeps milítiæ cæléstis, Sátanam aliósque spíritus malígnos, qui ad perditiónem animárum pervagántur in mundo, divína virtúte, In inférnum detrude. Amen
(English Version) Saint Michael the Archangel, defend us in battle; be our defense against the wickedness and snares of the devil. May God rebuke him, we humbly pray. And do thou, O prince of the heavenly host, by the power of God thrust into hell Satan and all evil spirits who prowl about the world seeking the ruin of souls. Amen
Imprecatory Exorcism
The 2nd kind is what we might have seen in the movie the exorcist. It is to be performed only by a Priest who has been given permission by a Bishop. It is below. It is called an imprecatory exorcism. And it involves a direct command to the devil (to leave the person or article - for example).
Saturday, November 3, 2007
A friend of mine asked me this on my own blog today, and I thought I'd check with you, professor, about it...
She said:
"Illegitimi non carborundum" is supposedly something like "Don't let the bastards grind you down", but since I don't speak Latinish, I wouldn't know. :P
So is that what that means? Told her I'd double-check with you.
~Rachael
She said:
"Illegitimi non carborundum" is supposedly something like "Don't let the bastards grind you down", but since I don't speak Latinish, I wouldn't know. :P
So is that what that means? Told her I'd double-check with you.
~Rachael
Thursday, November 1, 2007
Roman Ghosts
The Romans knew all about Halloween, or, at least the thrill of being scared and what ghosts are. Get this letter from the senator and historian Pliny, who lived in the beginning of the second century CE. This is the same guy who saw Mt. Vesuvius explode but he decided to stick at home and do his Latin homework on LIvy instead.
What an example to inspire you! Here is the letter:
BOOK SEVEN
LETTER 27
TO SURA
THE present recess from business affords you leisure to give, and me to receive, instruction. I am extremely desirous therefore to know your sentiments concerning spectres, whether you believe they actually exist and have their own proper shapes and a measure of divinity, or are only the false impressions of a terrified imagination?
There was at Athens a large and spacious, but ill reputed and pestilential house. In the dead of the night a noise, resembling the clashing of iron, was frequently heard, which, if you listened more attentively, sounded like the rattling of fetters; at first it seemed at a distance, but approached nearer by degrees; immediately afterward a phantom appeared in the form of an old man, extremely meagre and squalid, with a long beard and bristling hair; rattling the gyves on his feet and hands. The poor inhabitants consequently passed sleepless nights under the most dismal terrors imaginable. This, as it broke their rest, threw them into distempers, which, as their horrors of mind increased, proved in the end fatal to their lives. For even in the day time, though the spectre did not appear, yet the remembrance of it made such a strong impression on their imaginations that it still seemed before their eyes, and their terror remained when the cause of it was gone. By this means the house was at last deserted, as being judged by everybody to be absolutely uninhabitable; so that it was now entirely abandoned to the ghost. However, in hopes that some tenant might be found who was ignorant of this great calamity which attended it, a bill was put up, giving notice that it was either to be let or sold.
It happened that Athenodorus the philosopher came to Athens at this time, and reading the bill ascertained the price. The extraordinary cheapness raised his suspicion; nevertheless, when he heard tbe whole story, he was so far from being discouraged, that he was more strongly inclined to hire it, and, in short, actually did so. When it grew towards evening, he ordered a couch to be prepared for him in the fore part of the house, and after calling for a light, together with his pen and tablets, he directed all his people to retire within. But that his mind might not, for want of employment, be open to the vain terrors of imaginary noises and apparitions, he applied himself to writing with all his faculties. The first part of the night passed with usual silence, then began the clanking of iron fetters; however, he neither lifted up his eyes, nor laid down his pen, but closed his ears by concentrating his attention. The noise increased and advanced nearer, till it seemed at the door, and at last in the chamber. He looked round and saw the apparition exactly as it had been described to him: it stood before him, beckoning with the finger. Athenodorus made a sign with his hand that it should wait a little, and bent again to his writing, but the ghost rattling its chains over his head as he wrote, he looked round and saw it beckoning as before. Upon this he immediately took up his lamp and followed it. The ghost slowly stalked along, as if encumbered with its chains; and having turned into the courtyard of the house, suddenly vanished. Athenodorus being thus deserted, marked the spot with a handful of grass and leaves. The next day he went to the magistrates, and advised them to order that spot to be dug up. There they found bones commingled and intertwined with chains; for the body had mouldered away by long Iying in the ground, leaving them bare, and corroded by the fetters. Thc bones were collected, and buried at the public expense; and after the ghost was thus duly laid the house was haunted no more.
This story I believe upon the affirmation of others; I can myself affirm to others what I now relate. I have a freed man named Marcus, who has some tincture of letters. One night, his younger brother, who was sleeping in the same bed with him, saw, as he thought, somebody sitting on the couch, who put a pair of shears to his head, and actually cut off the hair from the very crown of it. When morning came, they found the boy's crown was shorn, and the hair lay scattered about on the floor. After a short interval, a similar occurrence gave credit to the former. A slave boy of mine was sleeping amidst several others in their quarters, when two persons clad in white came in (as he tells the story) through the windows, cut off his hair as he lay, and withdrew the same way they entered. Daylight revealed that this boy too had been shorn, and that his hair was likewise spread about the room. Nothing remarkable followed, unless it were that I escaped prosecution; prosecuted I should have been, if Domitian (in whose reign these things happened) had lived longer. For an information lodged by Carus against me was found in his scrutore. Hence it may be conjectured, since it is customary for accused persons to let their hair grow, that this cutting of my servants' hair was a sign I should defeat the peril that hung over me.
I beg, then, you will apply learning to this question. It merits your prolonged and profound consideration; and I am not myself an unworthy recipient of your abounding knowledge. And though you should, after your manner, argue on both sides; yet I hope you will throw your weightiest reasons into one scale, lest you should dismiss me in suspense and uncertainty, whereas I consult you on purpose to determine my doubts. Farewell.
What an example to inspire you! Here is the letter:
BOOK SEVEN
LETTER 27
TO SURA
THE present recess from business affords you leisure to give, and me to receive, instruction. I am extremely desirous therefore to know your sentiments concerning spectres, whether you believe they actually exist and have their own proper shapes and a measure of divinity, or are only the false impressions of a terrified imagination?
There was at Athens a large and spacious, but ill reputed and pestilential house. In the dead of the night a noise, resembling the clashing of iron, was frequently heard, which, if you listened more attentively, sounded like the rattling of fetters; at first it seemed at a distance, but approached nearer by degrees; immediately afterward a phantom appeared in the form of an old man, extremely meagre and squalid, with a long beard and bristling hair; rattling the gyves on his feet and hands. The poor inhabitants consequently passed sleepless nights under the most dismal terrors imaginable. This, as it broke their rest, threw them into distempers, which, as their horrors of mind increased, proved in the end fatal to their lives. For even in the day time, though the spectre did not appear, yet the remembrance of it made such a strong impression on their imaginations that it still seemed before their eyes, and their terror remained when the cause of it was gone. By this means the house was at last deserted, as being judged by everybody to be absolutely uninhabitable; so that it was now entirely abandoned to the ghost. However, in hopes that some tenant might be found who was ignorant of this great calamity which attended it, a bill was put up, giving notice that it was either to be let or sold.
It happened that Athenodorus the philosopher came to Athens at this time, and reading the bill ascertained the price. The extraordinary cheapness raised his suspicion; nevertheless, when he heard tbe whole story, he was so far from being discouraged, that he was more strongly inclined to hire it, and, in short, actually did so. When it grew towards evening, he ordered a couch to be prepared for him in the fore part of the house, and after calling for a light, together with his pen and tablets, he directed all his people to retire within. But that his mind might not, for want of employment, be open to the vain terrors of imaginary noises and apparitions, he applied himself to writing with all his faculties. The first part of the night passed with usual silence, then began the clanking of iron fetters; however, he neither lifted up his eyes, nor laid down his pen, but closed his ears by concentrating his attention. The noise increased and advanced nearer, till it seemed at the door, and at last in the chamber. He looked round and saw the apparition exactly as it had been described to him: it stood before him, beckoning with the finger. Athenodorus made a sign with his hand that it should wait a little, and bent again to his writing, but the ghost rattling its chains over his head as he wrote, he looked round and saw it beckoning as before. Upon this he immediately took up his lamp and followed it. The ghost slowly stalked along, as if encumbered with its chains; and having turned into the courtyard of the house, suddenly vanished. Athenodorus being thus deserted, marked the spot with a handful of grass and leaves. The next day he went to the magistrates, and advised them to order that spot to be dug up. There they found bones commingled and intertwined with chains; for the body had mouldered away by long Iying in the ground, leaving them bare, and corroded by the fetters. Thc bones were collected, and buried at the public expense; and after the ghost was thus duly laid the house was haunted no more.
This story I believe upon the affirmation of others; I can myself affirm to others what I now relate. I have a freed man named Marcus, who has some tincture of letters. One night, his younger brother, who was sleeping in the same bed with him, saw, as he thought, somebody sitting on the couch, who put a pair of shears to his head, and actually cut off the hair from the very crown of it. When morning came, they found the boy's crown was shorn, and the hair lay scattered about on the floor. After a short interval, a similar occurrence gave credit to the former. A slave boy of mine was sleeping amidst several others in their quarters, when two persons clad in white came in (as he tells the story) through the windows, cut off his hair as he lay, and withdrew the same way they entered. Daylight revealed that this boy too had been shorn, and that his hair was likewise spread about the room. Nothing remarkable followed, unless it were that I escaped prosecution; prosecuted I should have been, if Domitian (in whose reign these things happened) had lived longer. For an information lodged by Carus against me was found in his scrutore. Hence it may be conjectured, since it is customary for accused persons to let their hair grow, that this cutting of my servants' hair was a sign I should defeat the peril that hung over me.
I beg, then, you will apply learning to this question. It merits your prolonged and profound consideration; and I am not myself an unworthy recipient of your abounding knowledge. And though you should, after your manner, argue on both sides; yet I hope you will throw your weightiest reasons into one scale, lest you should dismiss me in suspense and uncertainty, whereas I consult you on purpose to determine my doubts. Farewell.
Wednesday, October 31, 2007
Happy Halloween
Okay, please forgive me for the non-Latin post... but... 'Tis Halloween... And I know the Romans didn't celebrate Halloween... but those further north in Europe celebrated some kind of older version of it... and it is Halloween tonight, so... I have to celebrate some how, and I found a Supernatural video set to "Thriller" for the occasion...
It's better than scaring y'all with "Ghost Hunters" video clips with actual ghosts in actual haunted places, right? 'Cause the "Ghost Hunters" Live Investigation of the Waverly Hills Sanitorium (where 64,000+ TB patients died over the course of about 50 years) on the Sci-Fi Channel is what I'll be watching tonight, while studying for Latin and baking Halloween cookies...
Happy Halloween, everyone!!!
~Rachael
It's better than scaring y'all with "Ghost Hunters" video clips with actual ghosts in actual haunted places, right? 'Cause the "Ghost Hunters" Live Investigation of the Waverly Hills Sanitorium (where 64,000+ TB patients died over the course of about 50 years) on the Sci-Fi Channel is what I'll be watching tonight, while studying for Latin and baking Halloween cookies...
Happy Halloween, everyone!!!
~Rachael
Sunday, October 28, 2007
#1 Reason to Pay Attention in Latin Class
(other than so you don't make Prof. M sad/mad by your inattention...)
Pay attention in Latin class so you won't get caught by a Demon and have no way to Exorcise it! LOL!
Yep, there was more Latin on Supernatural last week...
(The Latin in these is mostly in the last 1:15 seconds of the first clip and the first part of the second clip... oh, and the first one contains material that makes this show rated TV-14, but we're all older than 14, right?) :D
~Rachael
Pay attention in Latin class so you won't get caught by a Demon and have no way to Exorcise it! LOL!
Yep, there was more Latin on Supernatural last week...
(The Latin in these is mostly in the last 1:15 seconds of the first clip and the first part of the second clip... oh, and the first one contains material that makes this show rated TV-14, but we're all older than 14, right?) :D
~Rachael
Saturday, October 13, 2007
Oh! The Roman Forum...
I just found something that looks pretty neat. It's a digital reconstruction of the Roman Forum and all of its structures. How cool is that?!? http://dlib.etc.ucla.edu/projects/Forum/
~Rachael
~Rachael
Sunday, October 7, 2007
Cattus Petasatus
When doing some preliminary online Christmas shopping, I came across this book:
I know what I'm going to get my son for Christmas now! (Although I do fear that it may be beyond my reading comprehension at this point).
I never realized it, but Amazon has a bunch of books in Latin that you might not expect (such as Harry Potter and Winnie the Pooh).
- Sara C.
Wednesday, October 3, 2007
I-stems make me sad
I really am having a lot of trouble with the whole I-stem thing. Other than just straight up memorizing which ones are which I really want to understand the method behind the madness. I get that it's only 3rd declension nouns that take it. And I get that there are two 'cases' in which a 3rd declension noun requires this i-stem. The rest is...um, yeah. I have the hand out that Professor M gave us, and "it's all Greek to me!" (too bad it's not Latin, ne? might stand a better chance...) Help? Please keep answers as monosyllabic as possible (which is ironic because I know that's somehow the key to all of this).
On a really unrelated note, I work at a paint-your-own-pottery studio, and I've recently been considering painting stuff with Latin phrases on it. I'll let y'all know if I do! :)
-Lauren O.
(the girl who talks a lot)
On a really unrelated note, I work at a paint-your-own-pottery studio, and I've recently been considering painting stuff with Latin phrases on it. I'll let y'all know if I do! :)
-Lauren O.
(the girl who talks a lot)
Tuesday, October 2, 2007
the plaque
as requested... :D
Camera phone images, but they're all I've got...
Prof. M's:
While I'm at it, I figured I'll post pictures of the other two I've done too...
Lauren's birthday gift:
Guess what her favorite color is... LOL!
The idea for Lauren's came from her reaction to seeing this one below. She said something like, "That's awesome! But it should say, 'Behold! Everything is purple!'"
This one was the first one I did, created for my parents' farm in Virginia. I thought: The cabin needs a sign in Latin for the porch... Yes, indeed.
~Rachael
Sunday, September 30, 2007
Strigil
Since you guys liked the Strigil so much, I thought I would post a coupla pix here of the item itself (with a glass jar containing olive oil for rubbing) and of a pottery shard that shows us how the ancients used strigils. I consider the strigil ominous looking and a dangerous thing to scrape oneself with ; I guess I am influenced by our modern concern for safety features and the ubiquitous plastic for every day items....but the use of metal to make items that are now plastic is not really that old, as I found out recently: a few weeks ago I drove with a friend to Arcadia (1.5 hrs south-east of Tampa) to browse around in antique stores. I was shocked and dismayed to see children's items and toys from the 50's and 60's (cribs, easy-bake ovens, trucks, etc.) made out of really sharp tin, which at parts was extremely jagged and rusty. I mean, these are your parents who played with stuff like that! Did I mention that I didn't see any child-seats for cars anywhere??!! I just love some historical perspective. The ancient world is much more contemporary than we think, and our modern (western) world is only as recent as a blink. The mind boggles....
Cras, O puellae puerique,
Magistra Vestra
Saturday, September 29, 2007
Tampa Musuem exhibit
My daughter is a sophmore at Tampa Catholic High School and in English right now they are reading _The Iliad_ they have an assignment where they were required to go to the Tampa Museum of Art and view the Classical World Exhibition. Of course since it is due Monday we had to go today (it was assigned 3 weeks ago but of course last night was the first I'd heard of it). They had to choose 5 objects that reflect Greek culture and depict a character and describe it. So while she was wandering around with her friends (seems putting things off to the last minute is the norm with 15 and 16 year olds) I, too, perused the exhibit.
Many of the items are from around the time of Quintus and Horatia ;-) As I walked around I saw multae urnae. Many had eloborate drawings on them, they had handles and were many different sizes. One even depicted a drawing of 2 men carrying a large one suspended with a rope on a large stick. Many of the larger ones were labeled as amphoras, it said they were used to transport oils, wine and some kind of fish stuff on ships. Prof M? are amphoras different from urns used for water?
The most interesting thing I saw today was called a strigil, it is used to clean the body. The Greeks and Romans applied olive or other types of oils to their body and then an exfoliating agent, such as sand to the skin. The strigil was then used to scrape off the sand and oil also removing dirt and sweat. Afterwards they rinsed with water and dried off with a cloth.
Admission to the museum is free on Saturday's between 10 and 2 and you also don't have to pay parking then. It's pretty fascinating and you can be in and out in about an hour.
Tracy
Many of the items are from around the time of Quintus and Horatia ;-) As I walked around I saw multae urnae. Many had eloborate drawings on them, they had handles and were many different sizes. One even depicted a drawing of 2 men carrying a large one suspended with a rope on a large stick. Many of the larger ones were labeled as amphoras, it said they were used to transport oils, wine and some kind of fish stuff on ships. Prof M? are amphoras different from urns used for water?
The most interesting thing I saw today was called a strigil, it is used to clean the body. The Greeks and Romans applied olive or other types of oils to their body and then an exfoliating agent, such as sand to the skin. The strigil was then used to scrape off the sand and oil also removing dirt and sweat. Afterwards they rinsed with water and dried off with a cloth.
Admission to the museum is free on Saturday's between 10 and 2 and you also don't have to pay parking then. It's pretty fascinating and you can be in and out in about an hour.
Tracy
Sunday, September 23, 2007
Secret History
Lauren's comment on the 'Latin Made me Do it' ('Latina me iussit hoc facere'? 'Latina me compulit'?, 'Latina me fecit hoc facere'? Gimme some time here, and I will get it right and stylish...) urged me to recomend this excellent book to y' all (=vobis: it is the Dative case of VOS---and it means 'to you'---we will get to the dative soon, it will change your life!). Anyhoo, the book is called 'Secret History' and it is about a group of classics students in a small college in Vermont, who commit a series of heinous crimes urged by their readings in Greek (primarily) and Latin. I do not know how I lived without having read this excellent book (published in 1992). I mean, if you want to understand the tragic, deluded, sublime psyche of a classicist (or if you feel it stirring in you), you need to have a look, at least!
And if anyone finds any other books, movies, or other media that are classics related, please do share your recomendation here so that we can all know about it.
Ok, back to my coffee and grading---do not forget to send me any questions you have on chs. 8 and 39 respectively.
Salvete Omnes, atque Valete,
EM.
Friday, September 21, 2007
Wednesday, September 19, 2007
Latin T-Shirts
Monday, September 17, 2007
Latin 1 - TA Office Hours
Hey Latin 1 Students! It's your friendly class TA, Rachael!
I'm going to offer a weekly office hour on Thursday afternoons from 3:00 - 4:00 for anyone who needs extra help or has questions about anything. You can check the course's page at BlackBoard for more information.
~Rachael
PS - Professor, I forgot to ask you, what is the room number?
Addendum (thanks to Professor M): You'll find me in CPR 279, y'all.
I'm going to offer a weekly office hour on Thursday afternoons from 3:00 - 4:00 for anyone who needs extra help or has questions about anything. You can check the course's page at BlackBoard for more information.
~Rachael
PS - Professor, I forgot to ask you, what is the room number?
Addendum (thanks to Professor M): You'll find me in CPR 279, y'all.
Sunday, September 16, 2007
favorites...
As I was helping some of the Latin 1 students study for the first test (that everyone did well on apparently - "yay!" for y'all!) on Wednesday, we got to talking about favorite Latin verbs...
My favorite is facere (to do, to make). It's a very purposeful verb. ::nods::
I thought that this would be a good topic for a Latin blog... So everybody who wants to answer, what's your favorite Latin verb?
(And if anyone in Latin 3 might be able to tell me what the homework for Monday's class is, I'd really appreciate it.)
~Rachael
My favorite is facere (to do, to make). It's a very purposeful verb. ::nods::
I thought that this would be a good topic for a Latin blog... So everybody who wants to answer, what's your favorite Latin verb?
(And if anyone in Latin 3 might be able to tell me what the homework for Monday's class is, I'd really appreciate it.)
~Rachael
Roman Triumph
Beginning Latin--
There is no better Sunday morning for the Latin teacher than the one the (good) grades are in! The class average in the first test was 91. 25 (turn to BB for more detailed statistics). This average shows clearly that you have been very successful in your understanding of basic Latin concepts (noun, verb, subject, object, etc.). The other two remaining tests are much easier in a way, because you will simply continue to add more information onto these basic structures that you have already mastered. If you have made it so successfully through the first third of the book, clearly there is no stopping you until the end of it!
So, as my mind is swimming with your success mixed with my morning coffee, I had this double vision of an ancient Roman triumphus and the closest equivalent I have ever seen in Rome. It was the night that the Azzuri (the national Italian team) won the soccer cup, summer of 2006. Rome positively exploded in a bacchic celebration, fireworks and music and cars and motorinos and the Italian flag everywhere. Standing in the middle of it all in the Piazza Venezia, I remember wishing (for the millionth time in my life!) that I were Italian instead of Greek. What a powerful tool the triumphal procession must have been in cultivating the national pride of the Romans, their sense of mission and duty to bring over the entire world under their sway...and, as successful Latinists, you too are officially under the Roman spell now, at least until December.
So, enjoy your well deserved success and your Sunday, and I will see y' all tomorrow!
EM.
Thursday, September 13, 2007
test day
So the test in Latin 1 was today and it was not too bad, no surprises or anything. BUT I started on chapter 7 and I understand it...with my notes...it is going to take me a lot longer to memorize all these new endings and stuff, and it took me double the time it normally does to do the exercises because I was double checking the declensions of the nouns and all. WOW! it is hard but in a good way, a nice little challenge i guess. And I need to talk to a Nursing advisor because I was just taking Latin for fun but someone told me this week that 2 years of foreign language is required to graduate?? I knew that was true for some majors but is it true for all including nursing? anybody know? lol. Guess I will be taking Latin 2 in the spring whether I like it or not :) But of course I will like it.....
-Brandi
-Brandi
Wednesday, September 12, 2007
D'oh, I'm pretty silly
Oops, that last rambling post was by Sara Connolly. Me + Computer + Lack of Sleep = Crazy
Latin & 4 Years Olds: An amusing combination!
Perhaps I'm just being an overly proud parent, but I felt compelled to share my son's experience with Latin here. In order to help reinforce the grammar and vocabulary I have been teaching my 4 year old son the Latin as we learn it in class.
He's grasping the grammar fairly well thus far and is getting a huge kick out of the noun cases and suffixes; his name is Augustus and he was positively tickled to be able to decline his own name in Latin. There is another little boy in the class named Augustus (what are the chances, eh?) and my son told me in the car with great pride Tuesday afternoon that his class has "duo Augusti." As a result, my husband is teasing me for dooming our son to becoming a "dorkus maximus." :grins:
I am very pleased that we are starting the 3rd declensions now, so I can get him to refer to me as "mater" (and its associated cases) instead of "Sara" or "Saram." (It is hard to get on his case for calling me by my first name when he's actually using the accusative correctly; after all, I'm pretty sure I would have figured an accusative to be tattling on someone at the age of 4).
Anyway, I am probably just being overly silly with my ramblings on this subject. :smiles:
He's grasping the grammar fairly well thus far and is getting a huge kick out of the noun cases and suffixes; his name is Augustus and he was positively tickled to be able to decline his own name in Latin. There is another little boy in the class named Augustus (what are the chances, eh?) and my son told me in the car with great pride Tuesday afternoon that his class has "duo Augusti." As a result, my husband is teasing me for dooming our son to becoming a "dorkus maximus." :grins:
I am very pleased that we are starting the 3rd declensions now, so I can get him to refer to me as "mater" (and its associated cases) instead of "Sara" or "Saram." (It is hard to get on his case for calling me by my first name when he's actually using the accusative correctly; after all, I'm pretty sure I would have figured an accusative to be tattling on someone at the age of 4).
Anyway, I am probably just being overly silly with my ramblings on this subject. :smiles:
Hey y'all!
I won't be in class tomorrow - Thursday, September 13 - because it's Rosh Hashanah and I'll be in synagogue all day... So, if someone wouldn't mind posting what the Latin 3 homework on here sometime this weekend, I'd be so thankful.
I feel like I'm teetering on the precipice with the subjunctives and the passive voice... The deponents, believe it or not, seem to be helping a bit with the passives... I know that they don't translate passively, but they are formed like passives, so it's helping (and I'm oh-so glad that I don't have to try to learn even more suffixes right now! Can't tell you just how glad that makes me!). That just leaves all the subjunctives (I know I did disastrously on Wednesday's quiz. I was blanking completely, despite having an easier time with the homework... and I realized just too late that I had switched the endings of the future and the pluperfect around. D'oh!)...
This brings me back to my precipice metaphor. Not teetering in a bad way, but in a good way. I've *almost* got this. I know I have. I just don't know what's going to push me off the edge into total enlightenment yet. I have more questions about them that just might help... but it's nothing that can't wait until tomorrow afternoon when I can actually think about it and make sure I don't already know the answer.
~Rachael
I won't be in class tomorrow - Thursday, September 13 - because it's Rosh Hashanah and I'll be in synagogue all day... So, if someone wouldn't mind posting what the Latin 3 homework on here sometime this weekend, I'd be so thankful.
I feel like I'm teetering on the precipice with the subjunctives and the passive voice... The deponents, believe it or not, seem to be helping a bit with the passives... I know that they don't translate passively, but they are formed like passives, so it's helping (and I'm oh-so glad that I don't have to try to learn even more suffixes right now! Can't tell you just how glad that makes me!). That just leaves all the subjunctives (I know I did disastrously on Wednesday's quiz. I was blanking completely, despite having an easier time with the homework... and I realized just too late that I had switched the endings of the future and the pluperfect around. D'oh!)...
This brings me back to my precipice metaphor. Not teetering in a bad way, but in a good way. I've *almost* got this. I know I have. I just don't know what's going to push me off the edge into total enlightenment yet. I have more questions about them that just might help... but it's nothing that can't wait until tomorrow afternoon when I can actually think about it and make sure I don't already know the answer.
~Rachael
Tuesday, September 11, 2007
By the way..
My name is Brandi Brannon and I wrote the previous post ("First Time") I am going to have to remember to sign my name at the end of these things!
First time
Hello! So I just remembered we could do this today and it took me about 10 minutes to figure out how to get on here :) Anyway
the first test is in 2 days and I am kind of excited, weird I know. I love Latin and I was able to take 2 years in high school but our school went through 3 different latin teachers while I was there. and my Latin 2 class was basically latin 1 retaught by a different teacher. So I am hoping the test goes well. I keep messing up the 2nd conjugations and conjugating them as 3rd but hopefully I will perfect it before thursday. Alright well I better go study now!!
the first test is in 2 days and I am kind of excited, weird I know. I love Latin and I was able to take 2 years in high school but our school went through 3 different latin teachers while I was there. and my Latin 2 class was basically latin 1 retaught by a different teacher. So I am hoping the test goes well. I keep messing up the 2nd conjugations and conjugating them as 3rd but hopefully I will perfect it before thursday. Alright well I better go study now!!
Friday, September 7, 2007
Test
Beginning Latin---
You have now completed successfully the first 5 chapters of our textbook and it is time for the first test. This will be on Thursday 09/13, and it will take about 40 minutes to complete. Log onto Blackboard for a useful practice sheet under course documents (the one I handed in class Thursday). I also suggest that you retake the quizzes and practice on those too, checking your answers against the answer keys. You will find these quizzes also under course documents on BB. I am at your disposal for any questions over the weekend and, of course, throughout the next week. Take care y' all,
EM.
Thursday, September 6, 2007
So Thursday has become my favorite day of the week for two reasons. 1.) It's the last day of the week that I have classes to go to... not that that is a hardship or anything since it's mostly Latin class now... 2.) It's "Supernatural" night... This show has nearly taken over my life. And they use Ecclesiastical Latin sometimes, so there *is* a connection... Sam and Dean also remind me of the myth of Castor and Pollux, so there's also a Classics connection right there...
Castor = Sam --->
Castor = Sam --->
Pollux = Dean --->
So... uh...
Wednesday, September 5, 2007
So... I'm graduating in December (::crosses fingers::), and because of that, I'm kicking the can around about what to do after that... (other than Latin 4 in the Spring as a non-degree seeking student and finding a job, any job, so I can make at least a little money...)
I've come to the tentative conclusion that despite my getting a BA in History, I don't possess the... ::searches for a nice way to say it::... correct character to be a Professional Historian... I have family in archaeology and education and law... nothing is really grabbing me right now though... nothing is saying, "Rachael! Do this!" So I'm still thinking, grad school? But studying what?
I noticed looking through the USF Graduate Catalog that there is a MA program in Classics, but that it is technically done through the University of Florida... It has piqued my interest... Methinks, I need to find out more about what this program entails.
~Rachael
I've come to the tentative conclusion that despite my getting a BA in History, I don't possess the... ::searches for a nice way to say it::... correct character to be a Professional Historian... I have family in archaeology and education and law... nothing is really grabbing me right now though... nothing is saying, "Rachael! Do this!" So I'm still thinking, grad school? But studying what?
I noticed looking through the USF Graduate Catalog that there is a MA program in Classics, but that it is technically done through the University of Florida... It has piqued my interest... Methinks, I need to find out more about what this program entails.
~Rachael
passives
I finally figured out to sign into this bloggy-thingie (again!) and hopefully this posts for me. Well my question is a sorta question/sorta request...is there some kind of resource that was like the exercise we did in class today, where we took the active form of the verb, made it passive, then translated both sides? That kind of exercise would help me in understanding the difference between the two, cause the passive still is messing me up...in forming and in translatng...but if I keep practicing it should help (hopefully!). But now, I need to fight with my DVD player cause it's telling me no on the whole playing a DVD thing...stupid technology!
Stacy
(p.s. I totally wanna post this in webdings, but I'll spare the confusion and irritation!)
Stacy
(p.s. I totally wanna post this in webdings, but I'll spare the confusion and irritation!)
Passive Subjunctive Translations for Newbies
INTERMEDIATE LATIN---
Here is a chart that I have compiled beased on a single verb. We will qualify and expand our translations of the subjunctive once we get deeper into subordinate clauses. Hang in there! We will soon reach a comfortable cruising altitude, and then you can unbuckle.
EM.
Present Passive Subjunctive Translations (in independent/main clauses)
Expressing the Possible, the Wishful, the Hortatory
Cessare To delay
cesser I may be delayed/may I be delayed/ let me be delayed
cesseris you may be delayed/may you be delayed/ let you be delayed
cessetur He may be delayed/may he be delayed/ let him be delayed
cessemur We may be delayed/may we be delayed/ let us be delayed
cessemini You all may be delayed/may you all be delayed/ let you all be delayed
cessentur They all may be delayed/may they all be delayed/ let them all be delayed
Imperfect Passive Subjunctive Translations (in independent/main clauses)
Expressing the possible
Cessare To delay
cessarer I might be delayed
cessareris you might be delayed
cessaretur He might be delayed
cessaremur We might be delayed
cessaremini You all might be delayed
cessarentur They all might be delayed
Perfect Passive Subjunctive Translations (in independent/main clauses)
Expressing the Possible
Cessare To delay
Cessatus sim I may have been delayed (this morning)
Cessatus sis you may have been delayed
Cessatus sit He may have been delayed
Cessati simus We may have been delayed
Cessati sitis You all may have been delayed
Cessati sint They all may have been delayed
Perfect Passive Subjunctive Translations (in independent/main clauses)
Expressing the possible
Cessare To delay
Cessatus essem I might have been delayed (yesterday)
Cessatus esses you might have been delayed
Cessatus esset He might have been delayed
Cessati essemus We might have been delayed
Cessati essetis You all might have been delayed
Cessati essent They all might have been delayed
These translations work only in independent/main clauses. In subordinate clauses, the subjunctive (to subjugate) does not translate in English because it simply follows the context of the main clause and the verb that sets up the sequence of tenses.
Te mane excito, ne cesseris.
Te mane excitavi, ne cessareris. [Purpose]
Tibi impero ut cesseris.
Tibi imperavi ut cessareris. [Indirect command]
Cum cessatus esset, non venit nobiscum. [cum clause = circumstantial or causal]
Here is a chart that I have compiled beased on a single verb. We will qualify and expand our translations of the subjunctive once we get deeper into subordinate clauses. Hang in there! We will soon reach a comfortable cruising altitude, and then you can unbuckle.
EM.
Present Passive Subjunctive Translations (in independent/main clauses)
Expressing the Possible, the Wishful, the Hortatory
Cessare To delay
cesser I may be delayed/may I be delayed/ let me be delayed
cesseris you may be delayed/may you be delayed/ let you be delayed
cessetur He may be delayed/may he be delayed/ let him be delayed
cessemur We may be delayed/may we be delayed/ let us be delayed
cessemini You all may be delayed/may you all be delayed/ let you all be delayed
cessentur They all may be delayed/may they all be delayed/ let them all be delayed
Imperfect Passive Subjunctive Translations (in independent/main clauses)
Expressing the possible
Cessare To delay
cessarer I might be delayed
cessareris you might be delayed
cessaretur He might be delayed
cessaremur We might be delayed
cessaremini You all might be delayed
cessarentur They all might be delayed
Perfect Passive Subjunctive Translations (in independent/main clauses)
Expressing the Possible
Cessare To delay
Cessatus sim I may have been delayed (this morning)
Cessatus sis you may have been delayed
Cessatus sit He may have been delayed
Cessati simus We may have been delayed
Cessati sitis You all may have been delayed
Cessati sint They all may have been delayed
Perfect Passive Subjunctive Translations (in independent/main clauses)
Expressing the possible
Cessare To delay
Cessatus essem I might have been delayed (yesterday)
Cessatus esses you might have been delayed
Cessatus esset He might have been delayed
Cessati essemus We might have been delayed
Cessati essetis You all might have been delayed
Cessati essent They all might have been delayed
These translations work only in independent/main clauses. In subordinate clauses, the subjunctive (to subjugate) does not translate in English because it simply follows the context of the main clause and the verb that sets up the sequence of tenses.
Te mane excito, ne cesseris.
Te mane excitavi, ne cessareris. [Purpose]
Tibi impero ut cesseris.
Tibi imperavi ut cessareris. [Indirect command]
Cum cessatus esset, non venit nobiscum. [cum clause = circumstantial or causal]
Tuesday, September 4, 2007
passive subjunctive
I keep telling people to use the blog, but looks like no one has taken the advice yet.
Ah, well...
I'm taking my own advice and blogging a Latin issue:
I'm working on the passive subjunctives. It's coming along (I think - as with most things in Latin, I won't really get it until I've already gotten it, you know?). I'm confused about how each tense is translated to English in the passive subjunctive though... I'm not seeing a clear explanation of it in the textbook, but maybe I'm missing it.
~Rachael
Ah, well...
I'm taking my own advice and blogging a Latin issue:
I'm working on the passive subjunctives. It's coming along (I think - as with most things in Latin, I won't really get it until I've already gotten it, you know?). I'm confused about how each tense is translated to English in the passive subjunctive though... I'm not seeing a clear explanation of it in the textbook, but maybe I'm missing it.
~Rachael
Monday, August 27, 2007
interesting webcomic...
Hey y'all!
Happy first day of classes!
I got an e-mail last night from a friend of mine recommending this webcomic about life in Ancient Rome. I haven't read very much of it yet, but it looks interesting. It's called "SPQR Blues" and you can find the first one here. There's a little tiny bit of Latin in it, but the majority is written in English.
~Rachael
Happy first day of classes!
I got an e-mail last night from a friend of mine recommending this webcomic about life in Ancient Rome. I haven't read very much of it yet, but it looks interesting. It's called "SPQR Blues" and you can find the first one here. There's a little tiny bit of Latin in it, but the majority is written in English.
~Rachael
Sunday, August 26, 2007
Begin at the Beginning and go on till you come to the End; then stop.
Dear all,
This famous quote by Lewis Caroll has been very much in my mind today as I am getting in gear to start two classes tomorrow, beginning and intermediate Latin.
Our lives are a series of small and big beginnings and ends, unexpected gifts and painful losses. But the perennial beauty and stability of the Latin language, its forms cascading from case to case, from person to person, from tense to tense, provide something solid to grasp on, something to hold onto as you expand and refine your education and your understanding of the world. And your journey in Latin is parallel to mine, because no matter how many times I have taught these two courses, I am always startled and taken by it as if it is the first time I am laying eyes on a Latin text. In short, what I am trying to say is that in Latin there is no beginning, middle, and end. There is only a constant beginning, the endless fascination of the novice. I really hope I can convey this to you throughout the year, as you yourselves will continue to inspire me.
So, for the logistics, and for those of you who are joining in: here is a space for you to post random thoughts about our class (beginning and intermediate), about how Latin informs your understanding of English, or your other courses; post also anything related to the Roman world that peaked your interest (browse previous postings for examples). We all post under the same nickname so you will have to sign your posts (but that is not mandatory). I do not filter the postings, so use the honor code: no profanities or explicit language (unless you are posting Latin grafitti!), and no last names because we will get hits on google and that is annoying. Blog on then, and have a great semester y' all!
EM.
Saturday, August 25, 2007
hi
I do not want to go to school. I've been working my butt off since the end of last semester and I just don't feel like I have to energy to do this one more time. I don't want to fight for parking spots, find my new classroom, meet my new teachers, meet new people I'll never see again...I'm over USF and I just need to get this semester over with.
I do want to continue my education, but not at this point on time. I'm going to try to get into the Mass Com graduate program next fall..but in the spring and summer semesters...I'm not dealing with it.
I need to move. As my livejournal friends know, things at home are horrible and I need to graduate and move on. ASAP! I want to live alone but I may not be able to afford it for a while...we'll see..
UGH, such a sad entry..well life hasn't been so hot lately and that's the long and the short of it.
Hope you guys are looking forward to school more than I am. :)
Stacey Bedard
I do want to continue my education, but not at this point on time. I'm going to try to get into the Mass Com graduate program next fall..but in the spring and summer semesters...I'm not dealing with it.
I need to move. As my livejournal friends know, things at home are horrible and I need to graduate and move on. ASAP! I want to live alone but I may not be able to afford it for a while...we'll see..
UGH, such a sad entry..well life hasn't been so hot lately and that's the long and the short of it.
Hope you guys are looking forward to school more than I am. :)
Stacey Bedard
Thursday, August 23, 2007
So...?
Am I the only one who is kinda-sorta freaking out that classes start on Monday? ... 'Cause I am... I'm excited about it 'cause we're all going to see each other again, but freaking 'cause I don't think I'm ready for my last undergraduate semester... It feels like I have so much to do before Monday, but in reality, it's not that much. I'm getting my hair cut on Sunday (say goodbye to the super-long hair!), I'm picking up my parking pass tomorrow, and I should get my Latin 3 text in the mail very soon (I hope!).
And to make things slightly worse, I was just trying to remember simple things in Latin and I'm only remembering little bits and pieces... Methinks I need to get out last year's text books and review this weekend... possibly, a lot!
Still, can't wait to see you all on Monday! Enjoy the weekend!
~Rachael
And to make things slightly worse, I was just trying to remember simple things in Latin and I'm only remembering little bits and pieces... Methinks I need to get out last year's text books and review this weekend... possibly, a lot!
Still, can't wait to see you all on Monday! Enjoy the weekend!
~Rachael
Saturday, August 18, 2007
question about Latin 1
Hey Prof M!
Not sure when you might check this since it's between the summer and fall semesters, but... My oldest friend in the world (I've known her since she was 6 and I was 8; it's like we're sisters) will be attending USF for her MA in Creative Writing starting this semester. She needs to take a foreign language (not for grad credit, but in preparation for a PhD) and she's decided she wants to take Latin. Of course, after hearing what I had to tell her, she says she can't take Latin 1 with any other prof, but of course, your Latin 1 class is totally full. I assume that your advice for her would be for her to show up on the first day of class and hope that people don't show up or drop the class so she can maybe get in? I told her that I'd ask, so I am...
~Rachael
PS - I hope you're enjoying your break from teaching. :D
Not sure when you might check this since it's between the summer and fall semesters, but... My oldest friend in the world (I've known her since she was 6 and I was 8; it's like we're sisters) will be attending USF for her MA in Creative Writing starting this semester. She needs to take a foreign language (not for grad credit, but in preparation for a PhD) and she's decided she wants to take Latin. Of course, after hearing what I had to tell her, she says she can't take Latin 1 with any other prof, but of course, your Latin 1 class is totally full. I assume that your advice for her would be for her to show up on the first day of class and hope that people don't show up or drop the class so she can maybe get in? I told her that I'd ask, so I am...
~Rachael
PS - I hope you're enjoying your break from teaching. :D
Friday, August 10, 2007
I'm an aunt! Yay!
Sharing some of my excitement... My niece, Sophia Autumn, was born August 8th, and I got to see her for the first time last night. Here's a picture:
Better ones will be shared after I'm home again. Yay!
Both Sophia and my sister Lara are in perfect health and doing just fine after what Lara is sure was the most difficult day of her life... My biological mother, Susan, who has given birth to five children, remains unimpressed. LOL!
Better ones will be shared after I'm home again. Yay!
Both Sophia and my sister Lara are in perfect health and doing just fine after what Lara is sure was the most difficult day of her life... My biological mother, Susan, who has given birth to five children, remains unimpressed. LOL!
Wednesday, August 8, 2007
An Outpost of Alexander Found in Persian Gulf
Hey everybody!
It's Rachael, just checking in again. I'm still in Virginia. I'll be back in Tampa sometime before school starts, although I still haven't figured out exactly when. Hope all is well for everyone out there.
A friend e-mailed me this article yesterday and I thought I would share...
Alexander's Gulf outpost uncovered
By Neil Arun
BBC News
Alexander the Great's awe-inspiring conquest of Asia is drawing archaeologists to a desert island off the shores of Iraq.
Greek government experts are going to Failaka - a Gulf outpost of Alexander's army, now governed by Kuwait.
The island's bullet-holed buildings tell of a conflict still fresh in people's memories - Saddam Hussein's brief occupation of Kuwait in the early 1990s.
Beneath the sun-baked sands of Failaka, archaeologists hope to unearth the secrets of an earlier conquest - a settlement established by Alexander's general, Nearchus, in the 4th Century BC.
The excavations will focus on the ruins of an ancient citadel and cemetery, the general secretary of the Greek culture ministry, Christos Zahopoulos, told the BBC News website.
Earlier work by French archaeologists has uncovered the remnants of a temple to Artemis, the Greek goddess of hunting, as well as several Greek coins and idols.
'The first globalisation'
According to Michael Wood, the author of a book on Alexander, the period after the conqueror's death saw Hellenistic culture take root across a broad swathe of land, from India to Egypt.
He cites the example of Uruk, a site near Basra in southern Iraq, where inscriptions have been found bearing the names of the local ruling class.
The names, Wood says, are a hybrid of ancient Babylonian and Greek titles - and they date to several hundred years after Alexander's death.
Alexander's conquest of Asia also accelerated commerce in his colonies, giving rise to what Wood describes as "the first globalisation".
Failaka's position, at the point where the Tigris and Euphrates pour into the Gulf, means it would have been ideally placed to exploit this economic boom.
Mr Wood says the Greek team's findings may reveal more of how the ancient civilisations of the Gulf thrived on trade with their contemporaries in Mesopotamia and the Indus Valley.
The Greek archaeologists will begin their excavations in November, Greece's culture ministry says. Much of the work will be centred around the site of the ancient town of Icarea.
According to Mr Zahopoulos, the team will also carry out restoration on artefacts and ruins that have already been unearthed.
Civilian flight
Alexander was born in 356BC to the king of Macedon, in northern Greece.
By his early thirties, he had conquered much of the ancient world, from Egypt to India.
He died at the age of 33 of a high fever in Babylon, in what is now Iraq.
Failaka's name is thought to descend from the Greek word for outpost - "fylakio."
Before the Greeks arrived, the island had been inhabited by the Bronze Age Dilmun civilisation.
By the time Saddam Hussein's troops invaded in 1990, the island had become the longest continually-inhabited site in Kuwait.
Most of the civilian population fled for the mainland during the Iraqi occupation. Few have returned.
Story from BBC NEWS
Published: 2007/08/07 09:58:47 GMT
© BBC MMVII
It's Rachael, just checking in again. I'm still in Virginia. I'll be back in Tampa sometime before school starts, although I still haven't figured out exactly when. Hope all is well for everyone out there.
A friend e-mailed me this article yesterday and I thought I would share...
Alexander's Gulf outpost uncovered
By Neil Arun
BBC News
Alexander the Great's awe-inspiring conquest of Asia is drawing archaeologists to a desert island off the shores of Iraq.
Greek government experts are going to Failaka - a Gulf outpost of Alexander's army, now governed by Kuwait.
The island's bullet-holed buildings tell of a conflict still fresh in people's memories - Saddam Hussein's brief occupation of Kuwait in the early 1990s.
Beneath the sun-baked sands of Failaka, archaeologists hope to unearth the secrets of an earlier conquest - a settlement established by Alexander's general, Nearchus, in the 4th Century BC.
The excavations will focus on the ruins of an ancient citadel and cemetery, the general secretary of the Greek culture ministry, Christos Zahopoulos, told the BBC News website.
Earlier work by French archaeologists has uncovered the remnants of a temple to Artemis, the Greek goddess of hunting, as well as several Greek coins and idols.
'The first globalisation'
According to Michael Wood, the author of a book on Alexander, the period after the conqueror's death saw Hellenistic culture take root across a broad swathe of land, from India to Egypt.
He cites the example of Uruk, a site near Basra in southern Iraq, where inscriptions have been found bearing the names of the local ruling class.
The names, Wood says, are a hybrid of ancient Babylonian and Greek titles - and they date to several hundred years after Alexander's death.
Alexander's conquest of Asia also accelerated commerce in his colonies, giving rise to what Wood describes as "the first globalisation".
Failaka's position, at the point where the Tigris and Euphrates pour into the Gulf, means it would have been ideally placed to exploit this economic boom.
Mr Wood says the Greek team's findings may reveal more of how the ancient civilisations of the Gulf thrived on trade with their contemporaries in Mesopotamia and the Indus Valley.
The Greek archaeologists will begin their excavations in November, Greece's culture ministry says. Much of the work will be centred around the site of the ancient town of Icarea.
According to Mr Zahopoulos, the team will also carry out restoration on artefacts and ruins that have already been unearthed.
Civilian flight
Alexander was born in 356BC to the king of Macedon, in northern Greece.
By his early thirties, he had conquered much of the ancient world, from Egypt to India.
He died at the age of 33 of a high fever in Babylon, in what is now Iraq.
Failaka's name is thought to descend from the Greek word for outpost - "fylakio."
Before the Greeks arrived, the island had been inhabited by the Bronze Age Dilmun civilisation.
By the time Saddam Hussein's troops invaded in 1990, the island had become the longest continually-inhabited site in Kuwait.
Most of the civilian population fled for the mainland during the Iraqi occupation. Few have returned.
Story from BBC NEWS
Published: 2007/08/07 09:58:47 GMT
© BBC MMVII
Latin Theme Tattoo
One of my favorite movies is The Boondock Saints, and the main characters have latin themed tattoos on their hands: Justice and Truth
I was talking to my friend the other day who is a tattoo artist, and I asked him if he had ever tattooed latin words or phrases on someone. He said that he had, a few times actually, and that they have become more popular in the last couple years. This is one that he had done a few months ago.
Also latin themed tattoos are popular with celebrities. Angelina Jolie has one: it says ""QUOD ME NUTRIT ME DESTRUIT" meaning "WHAT NOURISHES ME ALSO DESTROYS ME."
I thought that was kinda cool
Corey Sloan
I was talking to my friend the other day who is a tattoo artist, and I asked him if he had ever tattooed latin words or phrases on someone. He said that he had, a few times actually, and that they have become more popular in the last couple years. This is one that he had done a few months ago.
Also latin themed tattoos are popular with celebrities. Angelina Jolie has one: it says ""QUOD ME NUTRIT ME DESTRUIT" meaning "WHAT NOURISHES ME ALSO DESTROYS ME."
I thought that was kinda cool
Corey Sloan
Quiz Question
Dr. M.,
Maria and I were reviewing verbs today and we noticed that on the test you gave today (8-8-07) you gave us the word divido. In the key you said the perfect stem was divisi, which it says in the back of the book. However, in the shaded box of chapter 32 it says the perfect stem is dividi, which is what we studied and therefore used to answer the quiz today. Which is it? Will our quiz grades be effected?
Thank you,
Lauren D and Maria B.
Maria and I were reviewing verbs today and we noticed that on the test you gave today (8-8-07) you gave us the word divido. In the key you said the perfect stem was divisi, which it says in the back of the book. However, in the shaded box of chapter 32 it says the perfect stem is dividi, which is what we studied and therefore used to answer the quiz today. Which is it? Will our quiz grades be effected?
Thank you,
Lauren D and Maria B.
Tuesday, July 31, 2007
Stanze della Segnatura
Yes, the school of Athens is simply marvellous. I was fortunate enough to see it close up and personal this past summer in the Vatican, where it is part of a room designed for the Pope's high brow guests. Here is a little from Wikipedia:
The four Stanze di Raffaello ("Raphael's rooms") in the Palace of the Vatican form a suite of reception rooms, the public part of the papal apartments. They are famous for their frescoes, painted by Raphael and his workshop. Together with Michelangelo's ceiling frescoes in the Sistine Chapel, these are the grand fresco sequences that mark the High Renaissance in Rome.
I assume you all know about the famous gestures of Plato, pointing upwards to the world of ideas, and his best student, Aristotle, pointing downwards to the classification of the natural world. Socrates is supposed to be the guy in blue sitting on the steps, looking like a homeless person. I was alwayc curious as to what the guy on the left was scribbling, and I finally satisfied my curiosity when I looked at it from half a foot away: he is writing some Greek geometrical formula (or perhaps a music formula? Look at the Greek words combined with the Roman numerals...how Renaissance is that!)
I am also attaching two more pictures. The first one is the ceiling in one of the adjacent rooms (stanze). I don't think it's Raphael though. It symbolizes how the advent of Christianity (cross) has shattered the ancient world (the broken statue), a very appropriate theme for the Pope's palace... And yet, throughout Rome and in all the religious establishments (e.g. cardinals' houses, even churches), I saw tons of classical art that they comissioned, both original and copies. Clearly these people appreciated the worldly and luscious beauty of the pagan world they were seemingly substituting and condemning...now, if that is not the definition of hypocrisy, I don't know what is! Anyway, the second one is Raphael (in one of the other stanzas) and it's called 'The burning of Troy.' Remember Aeneas from the first OCL book, who narrowly escaped with his father and fled to Italy? You can see him carrying dad on his back, on the lower left of the fresco. Just to give you an idea of the grand scale of this thing, look at how low the visitors' heads are...
Ok, I need to stop talking about Rome and the Vatican, cuz I could be writing all night. I hope everyone is doing well in your respective classes and jobs. Let's hang in there---it's only one more week!
EM.
Monday, July 30, 2007
School of Athens
This doesn't have anything to do directly with Latin, but the picture on page 85 of our text reminded me of it. This is actually one of my favorite paintings ever (I'm a Humanities major, lol) and when I thought of it I was hoping it might possibly be a depiction of the Academy that Quintus is studying philosphy at, but upon further research Raphael actually intended it to be a representation of an ideal community of intellects.
I think the thing that makes me love it so much (aside from its obvious aesthetic value) is that Raphael included all the great minds of the classical world: Plato, Aristotle, Socrates, et ceteri - even himself (how modest)!
I'm guessing that the part of the school extending into the background would be the atrium?
p.s. - Prof. Manolaraki: thank you so much for the detailed explanation of verb conjugations. It's a huge help. I'm just kicking myself for not persevering to find the answer sooner! :)
- Jessica G.
I think the thing that makes me love it so much (aside from its obvious aesthetic value) is that Raphael included all the great minds of the classical world: Plato, Aristotle, Socrates, et ceteri - even himself (how modest)!
I'm guessing that the part of the school extending into the background would be the atrium?
p.s. - Prof. Manolaraki: thank you so much for the detailed explanation of verb conjugations. It's a huge help. I'm just kicking myself for not persevering to find the answer sooner! :)
- Jessica G.
Wednesday, July 25, 2007
Blogathon 2007
At Dr. M's suggestion, I'm going to post this here for the heck of it.
This Saturday I am participating in the Blogathon. The gist of it is bloggers sign up to blog for 24 hours straight to raise money for a charity. I don't want to bring all of the details to this blog, but I am participating in this year's Blogathon because I'm crazy enough to stay up for 24 hours for a good cause. If you want to check out more about the event and about the charity I'm raising money for, check out my Blogathon blog here.
And since I'm advertising that blog here, if you want to be freakin' awesome and sponsor me during the Blogathon, that would be fantastic! All the sponsorship pledges go directly to the charity I choose, so you really are helping out a good cause. Plus, if you're around on Saturday, you can read the blog, leave me comments, etc. :) So please check it out if nothing else.
Thanks!
- Olivia
P.S. - And because Jessica and Dr. M have posted pictures of their kitties (and I know Rachael has in the past too), I want to show off mine. :)
The top picture is of Humphrey, the bottom is of Bogart. I'm convinced they hate me for taking so many pictures of them (hence their expressions).
This Saturday I am participating in the Blogathon. The gist of it is bloggers sign up to blog for 24 hours straight to raise money for a charity. I don't want to bring all of the details to this blog, but I am participating in this year's Blogathon because I'm crazy enough to stay up for 24 hours for a good cause. If you want to check out more about the event and about the charity I'm raising money for, check out my Blogathon blog here.
And since I'm advertising that blog here, if you want to be freakin' awesome and sponsor me during the Blogathon, that would be fantastic! All the sponsorship pledges go directly to the charity I choose, so you really are helping out a good cause. Plus, if you're around on Saturday, you can read the blog, leave me comments, etc. :) So please check it out if nothing else.
Thanks!
- Olivia
P.S. - And because Jessica and Dr. M have posted pictures of their kitties (and I know Rachael has in the past too), I want to show off mine. :)
The top picture is of Humphrey, the bottom is of Bogart. I'm convinced they hate me for taking so many pictures of them (hence their expressions).
Tuesday, July 24, 2007
Step in the Arena
Jessica:
First of all, apologies it took me so long to get back to you on your questions, but I forget to check the blog these days, going as fast as we are going. I am very glad you posted this, not only because THERE ARE NO SILLY QUESTIONS (I have spent years and years repeating this!), but also because others who have the same questions might see this and resolve any confusion. Do come back with more questions either here, in class, or in person, whenever you have time. And no, I don’t think of you less because you dash out of the class—I commend all of you who work and take Latin too! Ok, here goes my attempt to answer your questions, and I hope it helps:
To Professor M. actually shed a good bit of light on my noun declension problem the other day when she explained that -i stems usually follow one of the following patterns:
1. Nom & Gen singular both end in –is
Correct: civis, civis (citizen); collis, collis (hill); hostis, hostis (enemy); as we said in class, they all sound sing-song, so it’s easy to pick them out.
2. monosyllabic Nom & Gen singular are resolved in two consonents (dens, dentis)
Correct: These resolve their GENITIVE case into two consonants, so you must memorize the genitive, like you do for all third declension nouns. See exx. fons, fontis (fountain), nox, noctis (night), pons, pontis (bridge) and the like.
However, I still struggle sometimes trying to determine which conjugation verbs belong in. My two issues are this:
1. The infinitive for 2nd, 3rd, and 3rd -io verbs all look the same to me.
They absolutely do! That’s why, to differentiate between them, you must memorize not only the infinitive, but also the first person sg. It’s the combination of the two that will reveal whether you are looking at a 2nd, 3rd, and 3rd -io verb. So, take off the personal ending –o, from your 1st. sg. and see what are you left with:
1. If your last letter is –e- (e.g. sede-o), you are in the 2nd conjugation.
2. If your last letter is a consonant (leg-o, ascend-o, disc-o) you are in the 3rd conjugation.
3. And if your last letter is –i- (capi-o, fugi-o) you are in the third –io conjugation.
4. Now, the 1st sg. of the third –io (capi-o) looks exactly like the 1st. sg. of the fourth conjugation (audi-o). However, if you look at your infinitives, you can tell where you are. Take off the infinitive ending –re. Now, if your last letter is –i- (audi-re), you are in the fourth. If your last letter is –e- (cape-re, fuge-re) you are in the third io.
In other words, Latin will always provide known variables which you can use to work out the stuff that looks similar, the stuff that overlaps, or the stuff that you simply don’t know. One of my favorite parts in our class is finding the cognates, and seeing the light bulbs go on when peeps make connections between Latin and English. Oh, and Olivia, speaking of pulchritude, did you see the movie Akeela and the Bee? Ok, first, this movie will make you cry, then it will make you want to be a teacher, then it will make you fall in love with Latin and Greek! Seriously! Anyway, the word pulchritude plays a major role in this movie---I am not going to give away any spoilers, but do see it if you haven’t already! (Parenthesis: put your blogathon e-mail up here in case the newbies browse the blog).
What else? Oh, first, I see your cat and I raise you mine (see pic), and, second, here is an interesting video that Jordan sent me.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tsS__6LZK_g&mode=related&search=
It is a song (90’s rap with definite jazz overtones, I think) in which the artist Guru describes his struggle to dominate the rap scene in terms of a gladiatorial combat in the Colosseum, and includes other Greco-roman references and vocabulary. Here are the lyrics (explicit stuff omitted), which I at least needed to follow along:
Gang Starr Step In The Arena lyrics
{DJ Premier cuts the phrase Step up... over and over}
[Guru]
Once you step in the arena, cheater; you're gonna be a-
mazed when you gaze at the armor on this leader
Fully clad and glad to find a cause, I won't pause
Fear is a joke, slowpoke, I'm like claws
that'll rip 'cause your gift, is merely flesh
Superficial and I wish you, would give it a rest
But if you don't, I'll unsheath my Excalibur
Like a noble knight, so meet ya challenger
A true hero, while you're a through zero
Gettin beat to a pulp so that you can't run for help
I heard a gulp in your throat, cause you hope that I'll be merciful
but coo-cluck, I made you strut as I rehearse a few
battle drills, and watch your bladder spill
yellow fluid, check out how I mellowed into it
Face to feet to defeat, you can tell I'm into it
As I'm pullin out my lance, to kill you and advance to
the winner's throne; cause I own you once you step in the arena
{DJ Premier cuts the phrase Step up... over and over}
[Guru]
In the arena... or rather Colliseum
There's people gatherin by multitudes to see one
perpetrator fall to the dust after the other
Quickly disposed of at the hand of a known brother
Born wit the art in his heart that is Spartacus
And one-to-one combat Jack, just a thought of this
match-up, makes GangStarr wanna snatch up
one or two phrases from the new book with new pages
of rhymes that are built like a chariot
Dope vocals carry it, to the battle set
If a beat was a princess, I would marry it
But now I must bow to the crowd as I stand proud
Victorius, glorious, understand now
cause battles and wars and much fights I have been through
One MC got beheaded, and you can too
Forget it, cause you'd rather be just a spectator
An onlooker, afraid you may get slayed or
struck by a blow, from a mic gladiator
I betcha that later you might be sad that you played yourself
cause you stepped up, chest puffed out
And in just one lyric, you got snuffed out
Cause rhymin is serious, I'm strong, I'm like Hercules
You'll get hurt with these lines, close the curtains please
and suckers can jet cause I wreck once you step in the arena
{DJ Premier cuts the phrase Step inside my... arena over and over}
[Guru]
In the arena or forum, weak MC's I will floor 'em
Causin mayhem, I'll slay them, and the blood'll be pourin
Furthermore I implore, that as a soldier of war
I go in only to win and be the holder of more
trophies, titles, and triumphs cause I dump all the sly chumps
Never choosin to lose my spot, not once
For the mere idea of an opponent that I fear
is foolish utterly.......[explicit lines]
you better sit again citizen, weak MC's I get rid of them
Watch the way they get distraught when they get caught
in the worst positions, cause they didn't listen
and tried goin up against a hungry killer who's itchin
to mame and murder, those who claimed that they were the
toughest ones, they get done once they step in the arena
{DJ Premier cuts the phrase Step inside my... arena}
Gang Starr Step In The Arena lyrics
Monday, July 23, 2007
My Latin Experience
Hello to all! I just wanted to share some of my thoughts on my own Latin experience, and see if I can get some tips from the Latin veterans (or even fellow classmates).
I really really like Latin, although I feel like I am at a major disadvantage because I didn't take it in high school and it seems as though everyone else in the class did. But I am trying to learn it as quickly and as thoroughly as possible, and I am definitely enjoying it! Every day I find more and more cognates in English and it is so interesting to me. As silly as it sounds, I thought it was the coolest thing ever when we learned that "suburbs" and "suburban" come from the Latin words for "under" and "city," and when I figured out that the word used in hospitals, "stat" came from "statim!" That reminds me...do words like "fungus" with the plural "-i" get their endings directly from Latin 2nd declension nominative nouns?
Something I've struggled with (besides memory lapses, lol) is identifying which declensions nouns belong to (usually 3rd and 3rd -i) and which conjugations verbs belong to (usually 3rd, 3rd -io, and 4th). Professor Manolaraki actually shed a good bit of light on my noun declension problem the other day when she explained that -i stems usually follow one of the following patterns:
1. Nom & Gen singular both end in -is
2. monosyllabic Nom & Gen singular are resolved in two consonents (dens, dentis)
However, I still struggle sometimes trying to determine which conjugation verbs belong in. My two issues are this:
1. The infinitive for 2nd, 3rd, and 3rd -io verbs all look the same to me.
2. I still don't always get how to differentiate between the 3rd conjugation -io and the 4th conjugation. Like capi-o and audi-o (these are the examples in the back of the book). How is one an -io stem and one just an -i stem?
I know these questions probably seem very stupid but I have been looking for the answers since about the first week of Latin I. I asked my Latin I professor and she said I just had to memorize it. But I don't understand how if I can't even recognize it when I'm looking at it in the book? Admittedly, it has gotten easier in Latin II because the book provides the perfect tense, but I am still scarcely able to identify the appropriate declension for verbs on my own. :( I would stay after class to get help from Professor Manolaraki but I work immediately afterwords and I barely make it on time as it is (so please don't take it personally when I run out of class right at 12:15, professor! :))
Anyway, sorry for digressing, and I appreciate any help or hints or advice. And now, here is my cat!
- Jessica G.
I really really like Latin, although I feel like I am at a major disadvantage because I didn't take it in high school and it seems as though everyone else in the class did. But I am trying to learn it as quickly and as thoroughly as possible, and I am definitely enjoying it! Every day I find more and more cognates in English and it is so interesting to me. As silly as it sounds, I thought it was the coolest thing ever when we learned that "suburbs" and "suburban" come from the Latin words for "under" and "city," and when I figured out that the word used in hospitals, "stat" came from "statim!" That reminds me...do words like "fungus" with the plural "-i" get their endings directly from Latin 2nd declension nominative nouns?
Something I've struggled with (besides memory lapses, lol) is identifying which declensions nouns belong to (usually 3rd and 3rd -i) and which conjugations verbs belong to (usually 3rd, 3rd -io, and 4th). Professor Manolaraki actually shed a good bit of light on my noun declension problem the other day when she explained that -i stems usually follow one of the following patterns:
1. Nom & Gen singular both end in -is
2. monosyllabic Nom & Gen singular are resolved in two consonents (dens, dentis)
However, I still struggle sometimes trying to determine which conjugation verbs belong in. My two issues are this:
1. The infinitive for 2nd, 3rd, and 3rd -io verbs all look the same to me.
2. I still don't always get how to differentiate between the 3rd conjugation -io and the 4th conjugation. Like capi-o and audi-o (these are the examples in the back of the book). How is one an -io stem and one just an -i stem?
I know these questions probably seem very stupid but I have been looking for the answers since about the first week of Latin I. I asked my Latin I professor and she said I just had to memorize it. But I don't understand how if I can't even recognize it when I'm looking at it in the book? Admittedly, it has gotten easier in Latin II because the book provides the perfect tense, but I am still scarcely able to identify the appropriate declension for verbs on my own. :( I would stay after class to get help from Professor Manolaraki but I work immediately afterwords and I barely make it on time as it is (so please don't take it personally when I run out of class right at 12:15, professor! :))
Anyway, sorry for digressing, and I appreciate any help or hints or advice. And now, here is my cat!
- Jessica G.
Sunday, July 15, 2007
Random Weekend Thoughts
Ok, don't ask me how these are connected to Latin---I just know they are! It is because Latin showed me how to think and examine the world around me that I was able to register the following as the 'highlights' of the weekend---I bracketed the word because I think of these moments not as 'fun,' but as instances that made that lightbulb go on...
1) Saturday morning: the Ringling Museum in Sarasota, for the n-th time in the past two years, and always something new (the current exhibition on paintings of Venice is superb)---have you been there yet? Stop reading this, get up, and GO already! Bigger and nicer than the Tampa museum of art, especially if you like Rennaissance stuff (and the Greco-Roman collection ain't too shabby either). The layout of the garden as a Roman villa is not exactly Getty, but it still gets you. And it's only $5! Seriously, I am thinking of incorporating Ringling as extra credit work for Latin 2220. So. Go. You won't regret it.
http://ringling.org/
2) Saturday afternoon: Grocery shopping in Tarpon Springs. I should be able to get over the camp, the kitch, the sheer cheesiness of the place, but I can't do it! I mean, this is the worst of touristy Greece combined with the worst of touristy Florida---it's a monster! Look at the 'best gyro in town' served by an *Egyptian*, right behind a plastic cut out of Achilles in full body armor, surrounded by the Greek key pattern, in case you missed the point. Ack!!! I got my yogurts and pastas and I was OUTTa there! Note to self, before I get too pious about this: I own a plastic miniature colosseum, a coffee mug with Nero fiddling and Rome burning in the background, and a face towel featuring the Late Pope John Paul II---all of which I purchased last year in Rome. But why is *that* a post modern insider joke with myself, while its Greek equivalent offends me so deeply? What is it about our past that bears so heavily on the shoulders of modern Greeks? I wonder if there is a more healthy relationship we could develop with it, between the extremes of reverence and contempt. Something with more humor would be a good start.
3) Sunday afternoon: study break to see the latest Harry Potter. I think I might be growing too old for it--it didn't captivate me as the one before, which hadn't wowed me as the one before it, which hadn't...well, you get the picture. Anyway, I came back and read a little more on it, and lo and behold, I find this wii trailer, whereby kids can 'practice their magic moves' through the wii remote and 'play' Harry (looking all square and digital)...I am shocked. There goes magical thinking, just like that (Jordan, what would Phaedrus say about this?!). No need to imagine it anymore, you can simply buy it! I don't know what gets me more: the fact that books and movies are entire corporate events now, or the fact that I am already at this point in life where I can say things like 'when I was growing up, 20 years ago, we didn't have that!'. Here is the accursed wii trailer:
http://gametrailers.com/player/21243.html
I wonder, does wii conserve all the Latin references and dictions of the books? I mean, aren't the spells successful ONLY when the Latin is produced correctly? Isn't that the whole point of the power of the spell, in the books at least? Flailing one's arms in front of a TV set is supposed to 'recreate' the magical experience??!
4) Ah, the power of words...which brings me to Sunday evening. Reading this poem by Yeats made me think about the supremacy of the written word, of poetry, and of literary exchange, as the ultimate and most long lasting love affair of one's life:
After Long Silence (or: Long After)
Speech after long silence; it is right,
All other lovers being estranged or dead,
Unfriendly lamplight hid under its shade,
The curtains drawn upon unfriendly night,
That we descant and yet again descant
Upon the supreme theme of Art and Song:
Bodily decrepitude is wisdom; young
We loved each other and were ignorant.
I hope y' all have had restful, joyfyl, and thoughtful weekends. Missing you all---come by the office when you have time!
Vestra,
EM
PS. Rachael, thank you so much for posting the information on Queen Ann's lace. What a story! I am afraid the Greek name for this plant is much less glamorous, although I wonder (after reading on its connection with silphium), whether the Greeks were on to something. They call it 'selino,' the exact same name they use for the regular celery, that looks nothing like this plant...hmmm....
Friday, July 13, 2007
Queen Anne's Lace
After showing my vacation pictures to Stacy, Jordan and Prof. M. at the reunion yesterday, I got to wondering about this one in particular. Prof. M. asked what the flower is called. It's most often called "Queen Anne's Lace" in the US, although it's also called "wild carrot," and she said that they have them in Greece as well. (I forgot to ask you: What are they called in Greece, Professor?) I thought about it later, wondering why they're called "Queen Anne's Lace." So I looked it up... Supposedly, it's after Queen Anne (Anne of Denmark), wife of James I of England. There are several legends about why that is, none of which have been concretely legitimized in fact. The most popular one seems to be some variation of this: While making lace meant to imitate the flower, Queen Anne pricked her finger with a needle and stained the lace with a drop of blood. The flower has one violet-red floret at the center, you see... which to me calls that whole legend into question even more 'cause really, what are the odds...? Whatever the reason, the name has stuck.
But in my research I found out something else that's pretty interesting about this plant, and it connects this whole thing if not to Latin then to Roman history and culture at least, so I'll share...
The following is copied from an herb supplier's website:
"Queen Anne’s Lace
Daucus carota
Family: Apiaceae
Biennial. Native to temperate zones worldwide. The wild carrot is more strongly endowed with the wholesomely odoriferous and stimulating essential oils than is the domesticated carrot. These have pronounced carminative (gas-relieving) effect. The whole herb may be collected and dried for tea. The seeds themselves may be taken internally as a birth control measure. I have heard this works pretty well, but wouldn’t rely on it alone to prohibit conception. Queen Anne’s Lace is the closest living relative (on the basis of family and medicinal activity) to the Silphion, which was picked and used by the Romans as a culinary spice and contraceptive until it became extinct in the first century AD. Supposedly Nero was given the last remaining root. He should have planted it back in. Note: Although Queen Anne’s Lace seed is not toxic, Conium maculatum (Hemlock) seed which can readily be confused with Daucus carota is indeed very seriously toxic. Know and trust your supplier, or grow your own! Cultivation: Easy. Direct seed during mild weather in early spring. Thin seedlings to 3 inches apart. Flowers to 4 feet in the second year. Not for sale to WA state."
The flower heads at peak bloom can also be used as a natural dyestuff (you can see a picture of wool dyed with it here), producing a yellowish-green or greenish-yellow color on most natural fibers. I myself have tried to cultivate it for this purpose because that's the sort of thing I like to do, grow plants historically used for dye to make historically accurate reenacting accessories, like my shawls... But unfortunately, Queen Anne's Lace will not grow in this part of Florida. Our summers are far too hot to allow it to complete its life-cycle. Ah, well...
~Rachael
reunion, etc...
I was so happy to get to see you all today at the reunion... I hope next time we can coordinate it so that even more people can come. Next time, Prof. M, please bring photos of Greece! ;D I want to see what you did on your summer vacation too!
Here's a link to my photobucket, which contains all my photos, if anyone is interested. There are more clearly labeled photos there of people and places... more pictures of the Burough and of family, as well as actual pictures of the farm my parents have bought in Virginia.
Or perhaps, just embedding slideshows here would be easier... Sorry, I can seem to get them set up so that they won't play on continuous loop...
My cats...
The farm in Bassett, Virginia...
The Burough in Sumter, South Carolina... The only other place on the web that there is significant information about the property is at the National Registry of Historic Places, here.
Some of my family (most of the photos taken at various places in Virginia and South Carolina)...
~Rachael
Here's a link to my photobucket, which contains all my photos, if anyone is interested. There are more clearly labeled photos there of people and places... more pictures of the Burough and of family, as well as actual pictures of the farm my parents have bought in Virginia.
Or perhaps, just embedding slideshows here would be easier... Sorry, I can seem to get them set up so that they won't play on continuous loop...
My cats...
The farm in Bassett, Virginia...
The Burough in Sumter, South Carolina... The only other place on the web that there is significant information about the property is at the National Registry of Historic Places, here.
Some of my family (most of the photos taken at various places in Virginia and South Carolina)...
~Rachael
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