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Latin

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Latin is a dead language,
As dead as it can be;
It killed the ancient Romans,
And now is killing me.

Latin is a classical language belonging to the Italic branch of the Indo-European languages.

Quotes

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  • Latin is a dead language,
    As dead as it can be;
    It killed the ancient Romans,
    And now is killing me.
    • Common phrase recited by Latin students. Originally appeared on 20 June 1909 in the Los Angeles Sunday Herald, Junior Section, pg. 7, col. 4
  • And indeed, Latin, although conventionally classified as a dead language, is present in every aspect of everyday life. It is part of Catholic rituals, Roman law maxims and procedures, and medieval philosophical traditions. Natural history has borrowed the scientific nomenclature of animals and plants from Latin, just as heraldry uses it for uniforms and mottos. The Bible and the classics provide a constant source of quotations, even for those who are neither priests nor schoolteachers: not only are literary works full of them, but they are also widely used in oratory, both sacred and forensic, as well as civil, whether parliamentary, academic or of other kinds.
  • Often, what is not collected becomes lost or at least unappreciated. This principle holds true to an extent for the neglect that all of Medieval Latin literature has suffered in publishing over the past century. Classical Latin literature has been gathered into series, which, although not always as inexpensive as potential users might wish, are nonetheless affordable. Consider the rows of blue-backed Oxford Classical Texts or the serried red ranks of the Latin volumes in the Loeb Classical Library.

See also

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Wikipedia
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