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

Latin: The Beginning…

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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 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Latin: The Beginning…

Latin: The Beginning…

Introduction to Rome’s History and Early Geography

Page 2: Latin: The Beginning…

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!

Page 3: Latin: The Beginning…
Page 4: Latin: The Beginning…

Geography Geography

a. Rome was built on 7 rolling hills on the Tiber Riverb. Near midpoint of Mediterranean Sea

Page 5: Latin: The Beginning…
Page 6: Latin: The Beginning…

Early Legends Origins of Rome

a. Legend says that twins Romulus and Remus were abandoned on the Tiber River and raised by a she-wolf

b. The twins were the sons of the war-god Marsc. Romulus kills Remus & city of Rome is named after Romulus

Page 7: Latin: The Beginning…

Early History The First Romans

Three groups settled on Italian Peninsula from 1000-500 B.C.I. The Latins

1. Built original settlement of wooden huts2. Considered to be the first Romans3. Helped spread Latin-derived languages to the area

Page 8: Latin: The Beginning…

Geography & Early RepublicII. The Greeks

1. Settled in Southern Italy and Sicily2. Brought all of Italy, including Rome, into contact with the Greek

civilization3. Brought architecture, democracy, and philosophy

Page 9: Latin: The Beginning…

Geography & Early Republic III. The Etruscans

1. Skilled metal workers native to northern Italy2. Gave Romans the arch and gladiator battles

Page 10: Latin: The Beginning…

Ostia x

x Brundisium

Etruria

LatiumRome x

<--- Tiber R

iver

Corsica

Sardinia

Carthage xSicily

Africa

Mediterranean Sea

Naples xPompeii x

Adriatic Sea

Tyrrhennian Sea

Gaul

ALPS MTS.

APENNINE MTS.

Page 11: Latin: The Beginning…
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• Roman alphabet for LatinThe 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.)

Page 13: Latin: The Beginning…

ROMANSWROTEINALLCAPS LIKETHISNOSPACES TOTALLYCOOLHUHANDNO REALPUNCTUATIONLIKEWE USETODAYPEOPLEASK HOW COULDTHEYREADLIKE THATWELLSCHOLARSTHINK MOSTROMANSREADALOUD NOTSILENTLYANDBESIDES YOUAREREADINGTHIS ABSOLUTELYFINESODONTGO

KNOCKINGTHEIRSTYLEOK

Page 14: Latin: The Beginning…

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

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Pronunciation

• Vowels– Each vowel has only 2 pronunciations at most, a

long and a short.LONG SHORTā : as in father a: as in aha (first “a”)ē: as in they e: as in letī: as in police i: as in sitō: as in note o: as in forū: as in rule u: as in full

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Pronunciation

• Diphthongs– Two vowels making one sound.ae: like “ai” in aisleau: like “ou” in outoe: like oi in oilei: like ei in freighteu: like eh-hoo (pronounced quickly)ui: like oo-ee (pronounced quickly)---rare usage

Page 17: Latin: The Beginning…

Pronunciation Practice

ā, a ē, e ī, i ō,o ū, u

Mārs mē hīc nōn iūspār pēs vīs prō cūrnārrat ex mīlitis mōns lūxab sed in rogō nuncdat per quid post currū

Page 18: Latin: The Beginning…

Felix natalis tibi,

Felix natalis tibi!

Felix natalis, care amice/Felix natalis, cara amica

Felix natalis tibi!