Latin Lesson 2 - mercator I (TuTubusTutor)
Uploader Comments (TuTubusLatinus)
Video Responses
All Comments (20)
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keep this up!
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Kike-ilius?
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@imshadi Yeah, the pronunciation on these videos is way off. Use the Learning Latin with Virgil series. Not perfect but certainly better.
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I speak Italian, and Spanish since I was a child. This also enables me to understand Portuguese and written french (the pronunciation makes it difficult to understand when spoken at first). I can't describe the feeling of deja vu I get by this first peek into the mother of all my tongues. I am though bewildered by the pronunciation. Mercator sounds to me like it should have an equal accent on both final syllables so that it would evolve into mercader, mercatore, but also mercado, mercato.
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I love these lessons.Great addition to my usual Latin studies.
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Why, oh why do you try teaching latin, when you know nothing about it? That's what I can't understand.
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This is really great stuff. You should be very proud of your work.
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@MrIgnryan masculin ends in um, us o e and if its plural ends in i. Feminem ends in a e and ae if its plural. This probably doesent apply to absolute all situations but to most it does.
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Way helpful. Benigne.
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@KaylinJH I should read before I post... disregard that question at the end, great video!
simple question : how do we know if that word is masculinum, femininum or neutrum?? is depend on that's doer ends..??
MrIgnryan 2 years ago
Hi. Its pretty complicated. For now, assume that all nouns that end in -a are feminine, and all nouns that end in -us are masculine and all nouns that end in -um are neuter. But that still leaves all the 3rd Declension nouns, which can be a mix. meter is feminine but pater is masculine - at least that makes sense! I think it is easier to follow on my other series, Learning Latin with Virgil. Cheers.
TuTubusLatinus 1 year ago
so when writing how do we know wether to use UM,EM or AM on the target??
coolmonkey934 2 years ago
I'll be exploring this is more detail in a few episodes. For now, if the doer ends in -a (eg. culina, Metella, mensa) the target ends in -am. If the doer ends in -us (eg. servus, hortus, Quintus) the target ends in -um. Then there is the group with the mixed doers (canis, pavo, mercator) that all have their target in -em (canem, pavonem, mercatorem). In the upcoming vocab episode I'll give the doer and target form for every noun.
TuTubusLatinus 2 years ago