1 / 18

Latin: The Beginning…

Latin: The Beginning…. Introduction to Rome’s History and Early Geography. A Brief History of Latin! . Rome: according to legend, was founded in 753 BC Latium ---an area of central Italy where Rome is located “Latin”--- the name of the language spoken there

zuzana
Download Presentation

Latin: The Beginning…

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Latin: The Beginning… Introduction to Rome’s History and Early Geography

  2. A Brief History of Latin! • Rome: according to legend, was founded in 753 BC • Latium---an area of central Italy where Rome is located • “Latin”---the name of the language spoken there • 5 modern Romance languages come from Latin: Italian, Spanish, French, Portuguese, Romanian • English: 60% of English words come from Latin!

  3. Geography Geography • Rome was built on 7 rolling hills on the Tiber River • Near midpoint of Mediterranean Sea

  4. Early Legends Origins of Rome • Legend says that twins Romulus and Remus were abandoned on the Tiber River and raised by a she-wolf • The twins were the sons of the war-god Mars • Romulus kills Remus & city of Romeis named after Romulus

  5. Early History The First Romans Three groups settled on Italian Peninsula from 1000-500 B.C. I. The Latins • Built original settlement of wooden huts • Considered to be the first Romans • Helped spread Latin-derived languages to the area

  6. Geography & Early Republic II. The Greeks • Settled in Southern Italy and Sicily • Brought all of Italy, including Rome, into contact with the Greek civilization 3. Brought architecture, democracy, and philosophy

  7. Geography & Early Republic III. The Etruscans • Skilled metal workers native to northern Italy • Gave Romans the arch and gladiator battles

  8. ALPS MTS. Gaul Etruria <--- Tiber River APENNINE MTS. Adriatic Sea Rome x Corsica Ostiax Latium Naples x x Brundisium Pompeii x Tyrrhennian Sea Sardinia Mediterranean Sea Sicily Carthage x Africa

  9. Roman alphabet for Latin The Romans used just 23 letters to write Latin: A B C D E F G H I K L M N O P Q R S T V X Y Z • K, Y, Z were used for Greek loan words • W is literally “double-u” (V) • Lower case letters weren’t invented until the middle ages. • Latin is the only ancient language you can learn without learning a new alphabet (cf. Greek, Hebrew, Sanskrit, etc.)

  10. ROMANSWROTEINALLCAPS LIKETHISNOSPACES TOTALLYCOOLHUHANDNO REALPUNCTUATIONLIKEWE USETODAYPEOPLEASK HOW COULDTHEYREADLIKE THATWELLSCHOLARSTHINK MOSTROMANSREADALOUD NOTSILENTLYANDBESIDES YOUAREREADINGTHIS ABSOLUTELYFINESODONTGO KNOCKINGTHEIRSTYLEOK 

  11. Pronunciation • Consonants • Most consonants in Latin are pronounced just like they are in English. • There are no “soft” consonants. C is always hard like “cat”, G is always hard like “go,” T is always hard like in “ten” (not “motion”). • I is used as a consonant at the beginning of a word or between vowels. It sounds like “y” in “year.” (Iulius) • The letter V is pronounced like “w”. There is no “w” in Latin. U and V were originally written the same: “V” as in AVGVSTVS . • Modern textbooks, however, will use “u” for a vowel sound and “v” for a consonant sound. • Think about it: W is “double-u”: VV 

  12. Pronunciation • Vowels • Each vowel has only 2 pronunciations at most, a long and a short. LONG SHORT ā : as in father a: as in aha (first “a”) ē: as in they e: as in let ī: as in police i: as in sit ō: as in note o: as in for ū: as in rule u: as in full

  13. Pronunciation • Diphthongs • Two vowels making one sound. ae: like “ai” in aisle au: like “ou” in out oe: like oi in oil ei: like ei in freight eu: like eh-hoo (pronounced quickly) ui: like oo-ee (pronounced quickly)---rare usage

  14. Pronunciation Practice ā, a ē, e ī, iō,o ū, u Mārsmēhīcnōniūs pārpēsvīsprōcūr nārrat ex mīlitismōnslūx absed in rogōnunc dat per quid post currū

  15. Felix natalis tibi, Felix natalis tibi! Felix natalis, care amice/ Felix natalis, cara amica Felix natalis tibi!

More Related