Hmmm I think that is correct. "de" in that case happens to be a long vowel, therefore, sounds EXACTLY like when Estonians say, akadeemia, as writtn in Estonian. But would it be correct to leave the "ia" short but stressed, and "de" long and unstressed, perhaps that last one would only happen in some form of older Greek, but maybe not that either. It definitely sounds good with an ancient pitch accent, [akade:'mia], but that last one would crash and burn if I was wrong about that LOL.
Pessime accentum nonnullis verbis apponit, e.g. a-ca-DE-mi-am pronuntiat esse a-ca-dem-IJ-am, "om-ni-um" fert esse "om-njum"... non patiar, non feram, non sinam!
Thanks for clarifying.I never knew that the way that is called "classical" is actually the same as "erasmian". Mind you,I have learned Latin only independently,and for a very small amount of time,a little ove half a year.Oh, I just read, Erasmian pronunciation use was forbidden in the 16th century in some English universities under pain of physical punishment and risk of being thrown out of the school.Apparently,this ban was revoked,but the great vowel shift had it's effect on Latin, in England.
From what i know, the Classical Latin language was not pronounced radically differently, compared tothis video. The porfessor in this video does a good job for a native German speaker. There are dosens of ways to pronounce Latin.
Me encanta escuchar el latin hablado con fluidez y naturalidad, como en este video. muchisimas gracias por haberlo colgado.
alkantre 1 year ago
Academia has a common syllable on the final I, so academIa is a possible pronunciation.
evan1965 3 years ago
LOL I crashed and burned. :)
MaBu888 3 years ago
Hmmm I think that is correct. "de" in that case happens to be a long vowel, therefore, sounds EXACTLY like when Estonians say, akadeemia, as writtn in Estonian. But would it be correct to leave the "ia" short but stressed, and "de" long and unstressed, perhaps that last one would only happen in some form of older Greek, but maybe not that either. It definitely sounds good with an ancient pitch accent, [akade:'mia], but that last one would crash and burn if I was wrong about that LOL.
MaBu888 3 years ago
Yes he Is completely understandable, INDEED.
MaBu888 3 years ago
Pessime accentum nonnullis verbis apponit, e.g. a-ca-DE-mi-am pronuntiat esse a-ca-dem-IJ-am, "om-ni-um" fert esse "om-njum"... non patiar, non feram, non sinam!
Loquatorix 3 years ago
I've learned Latin for 1 year, could you translate your post as I understand a half of it. Thanks in advance.
MaBu888 3 years ago
Thanks for clarifying.I never knew that the way that is called "classical" is actually the same as "erasmian". Mind you,I have learned Latin only independently,and for a very small amount of time,a little ove half a year.Oh, I just read, Erasmian pronunciation use was forbidden in the 16th century in some English universities under pain of physical punishment and risk of being thrown out of the school.Apparently,this ban was revoked,but the great vowel shift had it's effect on Latin, in England.
MaBu888 4 years ago
From what i know, the Classical Latin language was not pronounced radically differently, compared tothis video. The porfessor in this video does a good job for a native German speaker. There are dosens of ways to pronounce Latin.
MaBu888 4 years ago
Il latino si pronuncia diversamente.
Latinum is pronunced different.
uycas 4 years ago
Mea sententia Latinam linguam optime Eduardus pronuntiat dumtaxat de illa quam restitutam vocant pronuntiatione agatur.
Baeticus2 4 years ago
Eduardum nostrum diu non video.
jdm314 4 years ago