The word "alien" comes directly from the Latin adjective alienus: of another place, person; unfamiliar; hostile; insane.
Alienus comes from the adjective alius: other, another.
Not A Dead Language
Ok, well technically it is, but Latin is everywhere. I'll show you.
Friday, April 1, 2011
Friday, March 18, 2011
Harry Potter
You probably all know that Harry Potter is riddled with Latin references. Well, here's a fun experience I had last semester while I was rereading Harry Potter 6.
One night, after studying Latin vocab with a friend for a couple hours, I was reading the chapter where Hermione and Harry find Ron snogging with Lavender Brown. Hermione gets upset and screams out "oppugno" and some birds start attacking Ron. When I read this I started screaming because I had just learned that oppugno means to fight against or to attack.
That came straight from Latin my friends.
One night, after studying Latin vocab with a friend for a couple hours, I was reading the chapter where Hermione and Harry find Ron snogging with Lavender Brown. Hermione gets upset and screams out "oppugno" and some birds start attacking Ron. When I read this I started screaming because I had just learned that oppugno means to fight against or to attack.
That came straight from Latin my friends.
Saturday, March 5, 2011
Finger Counting
Roman numerals came about because of finger counting. It seems obvious for 1, 2, and 3 (I, II, III), but what about 5 and 10? I mean a "v" and an "x" don't seem like fingers. Ha! Look below.
Holding up five fingers looked like a "v" to the Romans and when you hold up two of those together you get "x." Now you'll never forget what these Roman numerals mean!
*According to my Latin teacher, this is legit.
Holding up five fingers looked like a "v" to the Romans and when you hold up two of those together you get "x." Now you'll never forget what these Roman numerals mean!
*According to my Latin teacher, this is legit.
Tuesday, February 22, 2011
And
So this post is about the ampersand, otherwise known as &.
If you don't already know, the ampersand in English, means and. In Latin, et.
The ampersand was actually created as a way to write et in a cursive-like way. The font I chose actually shows the "e" and "t" pretty well, but it didn't always look like it does now. You can see the evolution of the ampersand here.
So every time you use an ampersand you are really saying et.
If you don't already know, the ampersand in English, means and. In Latin, et.
The ampersand was actually created as a way to write et in a cursive-like way. The font I chose actually shows the "e" and "t" pretty well, but it didn't always look like it does now. You can see the evolution of the ampersand here.
So every time you use an ampersand you are really saying et.
Monday, February 14, 2011
The Orient
The word "orient" comes from the Latin verb orior meaning to rise, to spring. So what does that have to do with Asia? Well, the sun rises in the East. So Asia, or the Orient, is where the sun rises.
Apparently, people used to call the West, the Occident, from the verb occido meaning to fall, to set (also to die or be ruined), but I've never heard the phrase used before, so this is just an extra, fun fact.
Cool, right?
P.S. My sister says I've turned into the guy from My Big Fat Greek Wedding who's always telling everyone that everything comes from Greek. Hmm . . .
Apparently, people used to call the West, the Occident, from the verb occido meaning to fall, to set (also to die or be ruined), but I've never heard the phrase used before, so this is just an extra, fun fact.
Cool, right?
P.S. My sister says I've turned into the guy from My Big Fat Greek Wedding who's always telling everyone that everything comes from Greek. Hmm . . .
Monday, February 7, 2011
Republic
The word republic comes from two words in Latin.
The word res means "matter, business, affair, circumstance, thing etc."
Publicus is an adjective meaning "of the state, common, public"
Together = public matters, state business
In Latin, they used it together, but as two separate words.
The word res means "matter, business, affair, circumstance, thing etc."
Publicus is an adjective meaning "of the state, common, public"
Together = public matters, state business
In Latin, they used it together, but as two separate words.
Monday, January 31, 2011
My Favorite Trivia
When I learned about this it blew my mind.
So you know when you were in elementary/jr high/high school and your teacher would tell you that if you left something out in a hand written paper you should draw a little "v" and then write what you wanted to insert?
Your teacher told you it was called a "carrot" mark, right? And that made sense to you because the "v" kind of looks like a carrot, right?
Wrong! It's real name is a caret mark. It comes from the verb careo, meaning to lack. So caret means, it lacks.
Crazy, right?
So you know when you were in elementary/jr high/high school and your teacher would tell you that if you left something out in a hand written paper you should draw a little "v" and then write what you wanted to insert?
Your teacher told you it was called a "carrot" mark, right? And that made sense to you because the "v" kind of looks like a carrot, right?
Wrong! It's real name is a caret mark. It comes from the verb careo, meaning to lack. So caret means, it lacks.
Crazy, right?
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