- published: 10 Dec 2010
- views: 6312
2:59
Mario fablando Aragonés - Mario speaking Aragonese
Mario gives us a brief history of the Aragonese language, and what it means to speak such ...
published: 10 Dec 2010
Mario fablando Aragonés - Mario speaking Aragonese
Mario gives us a brief history of the Aragonese language, and what it means to speak such a unique language.
===
I'll translate the following text sometime in the near future, but for now, you'll just have to do your best! Those of you Spanish/Catalan/Portuguese speakers shouldn't have any trouble.
===
"TEXTO VIDEO SOBRE L´ARAGONÉS
- Ola a totz y todas, me digo Mario, tiengo 26 anyadas y soi de Zaragoza, que ye a capital d´un chicorrón país que se ditz Aragón y que ye chusto debaixo d´os Pirineus. Actualment perteneix a l´Estau espanyol.
- Yo charro una luenga que se ditz aragones, y que se fabla no mas aquí en Aragon, y lo que voi a fer ye esplenicar-tos una mica...bueno, una mica d´a suya historia y como ye a situación reyal de l´aragonés agora mesmo.
- L´aragonés surtió alto u baxo en o sieglo ueiteno (VIII) en os Pirineus centrals, y ye un dialecto d´o latín como son a resta de luengas romanicas, tanto d´a peninsula como d´a resta d´Europa. Con a reconquista por parti d´o Reino d´Aragón en os territorios musulmans y a espardidura d´o Reino ísto conlevó tamién a espardidura d´a luenga por o territorio aragonés y tamién mesmo por atros puestos como puestar o País Valencián.
- Mientres varios sieglos l´aragonés ye a luenga oficial d´o Reino, ista situgación contina dica lo sieglo quinceno quan se corona como rei un rei d´orichen castellán d´a dinastía d´os Trastamara y dende ixe inte prencipia un proceso de castellanización d´o Reino que plega dica nuestros diyas. Dende allora l´aragones queda como una luenga d´as clases baixas de uso y de emplego rural y o castellán como una luenga de poder y d´as clases altas d´a sociedat.
- A caída d´o rechimen de Franco en 1978 suposa un incremento d´os treballos literarios y d´investigacion sobre a luenga y tamién d´o numero de fabladors que quereban aprender-la. Manimenos no ha estau dica l´anyada 2009 quan o Gubierno d´Aragón ha aprebau una lei ta l´emplego y regularización d´a luenga que encara no ye reconoixita como oficial.
- Actualment l´aragonés se charra de traza patrimonial en as valls d´o Pirineu, habendo-ie muitas variedatz dialectals, como pueden estar o cheso, l´ansotano, chistabín, patués, belsetán, asinas-asinas. Fueras d´ixo bi ha muitas organizacions arredol de tot Aragon que preban de luitar por a supervivencia d´a luenga y que mesmo imparten clases d´aragonés en esferents puestos d´Aragón.
- Encara que a mia luenga materna no ye l´aragonés, perque mis pais no son aragoneses, yo aprendié aragonés aquí en Zaragoza en una escuela que se ditz Nogará, y aprendié aragonés perque cuento que ye alazetal mantener viva a tuya cultura y perque sería una pena dixar amortar un tresoro como ye a luenga aragonesa con más de mil anyadas d´historia.
- Bueno pos isto ha estau tot, muitas gracias a totz y todas, que tos vaiga bueno, y entalto l´aragones y as luengas minoritarias que son en luita! Chicotz, pero grans!!"
- published: 10 Dec 2010
- views: 6312
8:37
Good News ARAGONESE: Common (aragonés) People/Language Movie Trailer
See http://wlmov.com/program/c27580 for the full Good News ARAGONESE: Common Movie
.........
published: 14 Mar 2009
Good News ARAGONESE: Common (aragonés) People/Language Movie Trailer
See http://wlmov.com/program/c27580 for the full Good News ARAGONESE: Common Movie
..........
This is: Good News ARAGONESE: Common (aragonés) People/Language Movie Trailer c27580 [c27580t]
Other names for this language are: Altoaragones, Aragones: Comun, Aragonese: Written, Fabla Aragonesa, High Aragonese, Patues, aragonés
This language is spoken in: Spain (España, Espanya, Espainia, Espanha)
This movie concerns: movie movies video videos music song songs mp3 God Allah Jesus Christ real exist exists early life crucifixion tomb Bible Christian Christians church gospel injil hope help life Global Recordings Network language free world language movies
For more information on this program see http://globalrecordings.net/program/c27580
..........
- published: 14 Mar 2009
- views: 2199
8:34
Good News ARAGONESE: Ribagorzano (aragonés) People/Language Movie Trailer
See http://wlmov.com/program/c27581 for the full Good News ARAGONESE: Ribagorzano Movie
....
published: 14 Mar 2009
Good News ARAGONESE: Ribagorzano (aragonés) People/Language Movie Trailer
See http://wlmov.com/program/c27581 for the full Good News ARAGONESE: Ribagorzano Movie
..........
This is: Good News ARAGONESE: Ribagorzano (aragonés) People/Language Movie Trailer c27581 [c27581t]
Other names for this language are: Altoribagorzano, Aragones: Altaribagorza, Aragonese: Eastern Aragonese, Benasques, Chistabino, Fabla, Fobano, Grausino, Ribagorzano, aragonés
This language is spoken in: Spain (España, Espanya, Espainia, Espanha)
This movie concerns: movie movies video videos music song songs mp3 God Allah Jesus Christ real exist exists early life crucifixion tomb Bible Christian Christians church gospel injil hope help life Global Recordings Network language free world language movies
For more information on this program see http://globalrecordings.net/program/c27581
..........
- published: 14 Mar 2009
- views: 1170
7:12
Catalonia: Europe's Next Country?
From: www.vagabrothers.com
Vagabrothers Mark and Alex travel to Barcelona on September 1...
published: 19 Sep 2012
Catalonia: Europe's Next Country?
From: www.vagabrothers.com
Vagabrothers Mark and Alex travel to Barcelona on September 11th, the national day of Catalonia, come along as they explore the roots of Catalan independence and speak to some of the 1.5 million people who attended this year's Independence Day rally.
For more, see our website: www.vagabrothers.com
- published: 19 Sep 2012
- views: 5699
1:21
Spanish Language
Spanish Language | Weather in Spain
http://www.weatherinspain.net/spanish-phrases/
Spain ...
published: 20 Jan 2013
Spanish Language
Spanish Language | Weather in Spain
http://www.weatherinspain.net/spanish-phrases/
Spain Culture and Weather
Spain is a sovereign state and a part of European Union, is located in southwest in Europe occupying most of the Iberian Peninsula. If we consider the area, Spain is the world's 52nd largest country.
Islands, Mountain and Rivers:
Spain includes the Canary Islands in the Atlantic Ocean, the Balearic Islands in the Mediterranean Sea, ad a large number of uninhabited Islands on the side of Mediterranean. Canary Islands, 90 km off the west coast of The Africa, are of volcanic origin. The large central islands, Gran Canatis and Tenerife, have the highest peak. In Spain, Mainland Spain is a mountainous country, and dominated by mountain chains and high plateaus.
There are some major rivers in Spain like as the Ebro, the Duero, the Tagus, the Guadalquivir, and the Guadiana. Alluvial plains are also found along the coast, the biggest of which is that of Guadalquivir in Andalusia.
Climate:
The climate in Spain varies across the country. In Spain there are three climate zones are available, based on orographic conditions and geographical situation, namely the Oceanic Climate, the semiarid climate and the Mediterranean climate. Apart from these three main climate zone, there are other sub-zones that can also be found, such as a typical subtropical climate in Canary Islands, and the alpine climate in the Sierra Nevada and Pyrenees.
The Semiarid climate can be found in the south eastern part of this country, mainly in the region of Ebro valley and in the Murcia. In contrast to the main Mediterranean climate, the dry season continues till the end of summer.
The Mediterranean climate is classified by the cool and wet winters, and dry and warm summers. According to Köppen climate classification, it is dominating in the Iberian Peninsula, with two main varieties: Csa and Csb.
The Oceanic climate is found in the northern area of the country, mainly in the regions of Asturias, Basque Country, Galicia and Cantabria.
Language in Spain:
Culturally, Spain is a Western Country and is openly multilingual country, and constitution established that the nation will protect "all Spaniards and the peoples of Spain in the exercise of their cultures and traditions, human rights, languages and institution.
Spanish is the official language of the entire country, and it is the duty and right of every Spaniard to understand this language. The other official languages of this country, co-official with Spanish language are- Galician in Galicia, Catalan in Catalonia and Basque in the Navarre and Basque Country. Spanish is nearly related to the other Iberian Romance Languages: Aragonese, Ladino, Catalan, Galician, Leonese, Asturian, Portuguese and Mirandese. This language has many borrowing from other languages and French and Italian languages have also contributed in its vocabulary.
Vocabulary:
Few words can be different in Spanish language, in different Hipanophone countries. Spanish speakers can easily recognize other Spanish forms, even in the places where they they are not generally used. But in other way, Spaniards do not recognize specifically American usage. Taking as an Example, Spanish mantequilla, aguacate and albaricoque correspond to Manteca, palta, and damasco, respectively, in Chile, Argentina, Peru, Uruguay and Paraguay.
Spanish Language | Weather in Spain
http://www.weatherinspain.net/spanish-phrases/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6VKKc3Ka4Zg
- published: 20 Jan 2013
- views: 11784
15:01
CAPITVLVM TERTIVM - CAVE CANEM - LINGVA LATINA
Latin (lingua latīna, IPA: [laˈtiːna]) is an Italic language originally spoken in Latium a...
published: 28 Feb 2011
CAPITVLVM TERTIVM - CAVE CANEM - LINGVA LATINA
Latin (lingua latīna, IPA: [laˈtiːna]) is an Italic language originally spoken in Latium and Ancient Rome. Although it is often considered a dead language, a small number of scholars and members of the Christian clergy can speak it fluently, and it continues to be taught in schools and universities. Latin has been, and currently is, used in the process of new word production in modern languages from many different families, including English. Latin and its daughter Romance languages are the only surviving branch of the Italic language family. Other branches, known as Italic languages, are attested in documents surviving from early Italy, but were assimilated during the Roman Republic. The one possible exception is Venetic, the language of the people who settled Venetia, who in Roman times spoke their language in parallel with Latin.
The extensive use of elements from vernacular speech by the earliest authors and inscriptions of the Roman Republic make it clear that the original, unwritten language of the Roman Monarchy was a colloquial form only partly reconstructable called Vulgar Latin. By the late Roman Republic literate persons mainly at Rome had created a standard form from the spoken language of the educated and empowered now called Classical Latin, then called simply Latin or Latinity. The term Vulgar Latin came to mean the various dialects of the citizenry. With the Roman conquest, Latin spread to countries around the Mediterranean, and the vernacular dialects spoken in these areas developed into the Romance languages, including Aragonese, Catalan, Corsican, French, Galician, Italian, Portuguese, Romanian, Romansh, Sardinian, and Spanish. Classical Latin, however, continued to develop after the fall of the Roman Empire and through the Middle Ages, and was used as the language of international communication, scholarship and science until the 18th century, when it was supplanted by vernacular languages.
Latin is a highly inflected language, with three distinct genders, seven noun cases, four verb conjugations, six tenses, six persons, three moods, two voices, two aspects and two numbers. A dual number is rare and archaic. One of the seven cases is the locative case, generally only used with place nouns. The vocative is nearly identical to the nominative. There are only five fully productive cases; accordingly, different authors list five, six or seven as the number of cases. Adjectives and adverbs are compared, and adjectives are inflected for case, gender, and number. Although Latin has demonstrative pronouns indicating varying degree of closeness, it lacks articles. Later Romance language articles developed from the demonstrative pronouns; e.g., le and la from ille and illa. Romance languages were created by simplification of this inflectional complexity in various ways; e.g., uninflected Italian oggi ("today") from the Latin ablative case, hoc die.
O latim é uma antiga língua indo-europeia do ramo itálico originalmente falada no Lácio, a região do entorno de Roma. Foi amplamente difundida, especialmente na Europa, como a língua oficial da República Romana, do Império Romano e, após a conversão deste último ao cristianismo, da Igreja Católica. Através da Igreja, tornou-se a língua dos acadêmicos e filósofos europeus medievais. Por ser uma língua altamente flexiva e sintética, a sua sintaxe (ordem das palavras) é, em alguma medida, variável, se comparada com a de idiomas analíticos como o português, embora em prosa os romanos tendessem a preferir a ordem SOV. A sintaxe é indicada por uma estrutura de afixos ligados a temas. O alfabeto latino, derivado dos alfabetos etrusco e grego (por sua vez, derivados do alfabeto fenício), continua a ser o mais amplamente usado no mundo.
Embora o latim seja hoje uma língua morta, com poucos falantes fluentes e sem que ninguém o tenha por língua materna, ainda é empregado pela Igreja Católica. Exerceu enorme influência sobre diversas línguas vivas, ao servir de fonte vocabular para a ciência, o mundo acadêmico e o direito. O latim vulgar, um dialeto do latim, é o ancestral das línguas neolatinas (italiano, francês, espanhol, português, romeno, catalão, romanche e outros idiomas e dialetos regionais da área); muitas palavras adaptadas do latim foram adotadas por outras línguas modernas, como o inglês. O fato de haver sido a lingua franca do mundo ocidental por mais de mil anos é prova de sua influência.
O latim ainda é a língua oficial da Cidade do Vaticano e do Rito Romano da Igreja Católica. Foi a principal língua litúrgica até o Concílio Vaticano Segundo nos anos 1960. O latim clássico, a língua literária do final da República e do início do Império Romano, ainda hoje é ensinado em muitas escolas primárias e secundárias, embora seu papel se tenha reduzido desde o início do século XX.
- published: 28 Feb 2011
- views: 2275
8:42
CAPITVLVM SECVNDVM - CAVE CANEM - LINGVA LATINA
Latin (lingua latīna, IPA: [laˈtiːna]) is an Italic language originally spoken in Latium a...
published: 26 Feb 2011
CAPITVLVM SECVNDVM - CAVE CANEM - LINGVA LATINA
Latin (lingua latīna, IPA: [laˈtiːna]) is an Italic language originally spoken in Latium and Ancient Rome. Although it is often considered a dead language, a small number of scholars and members of the Christian clergy can speak it fluently, and it continues to be taught in schools and universities. Latin has been, and currently is, used in the process of new word production in modern languages from many different families, including English. Latin and its daughter Romance languages are the only surviving branch of the Italic language family. Other branches, known as Italic languages, are attested in documents surviving from early Italy, but were assimilated during the Roman Republic. The one possible exception is Venetic, the language of the people who settled Venetia, who in Roman times spoke their language in parallel with Latin.
The extensive use of elements from vernacular speech by the earliest authors and inscriptions of the Roman Republic make it clear that the original, unwritten language of the Roman Monarchy was a colloquial form only partly reconstructable called Vulgar Latin. By the late Roman Republic literate persons mainly at Rome had created a standard form from the spoken language of the educated and empowered now called Classical Latin, then called simply Latin or Latinity. The term Vulgar Latin came to mean the various dialects of the citizenry. With the Roman conquest, Latin spread to countries around the Mediterranean, and the vernacular dialects spoken in these areas developed into the Romance languages, including Aragonese, Catalan, Corsican, French, Galician, Italian, Portuguese, Romanian, Romansh, Sardinian, and Spanish. Classical Latin, however, continued to develop after the fall of the Roman Empire and through the Middle Ages, and was used as the language of international communication, scholarship and science until the 18th century, when it was supplanted by vernacular languages.
Latin is a highly inflected language, with three distinct genders, seven noun cases, four verb conjugations, six tenses, six persons, three moods, two voices, two aspects and two numbers. A dual number is rare and archaic. One of the seven cases is the locative case, generally only used with place nouns. The vocative is nearly identical to the nominative. There are only five fully productive cases; accordingly, different authors list five, six or seven as the number of cases. Adjectives and adverbs are compared, and adjectives are inflected for case, gender, and number. Although Latin has demonstrative pronouns indicating varying degree of closeness, it lacks articles. Later Romance language articles developed from the demonstrative pronouns; e.g., le and la from ille and illa. Romance languages were created by simplification of this inflectional complexity in various ways; e.g., uninflected Italian oggi ("today") from the Latin ablative case, hoc die.
O latim é uma antiga língua indo-europeia do ramo itálico originalmente falada no Lácio, a região do entorno de Roma. Foi amplamente difundida, especialmente na Europa, como a língua oficial da República Romana, do Império Romano e, após a conversão deste último ao cristianismo, da Igreja Católica. Através da Igreja, tornou-se a língua dos acadêmicos e filósofos europeus medievais. Por ser uma língua altamente flexiva e sintética, a sua sintaxe (ordem das palavras) é, em alguma medida, variável, se comparada com a de idiomas analíticos como o português, embora em prosa os romanos tendessem a preferir a ordem SOV. A sintaxe é indicada por uma estrutura de afixos ligados a temas. O alfabeto latino, derivado dos alfabetos etrusco e grego (por sua vez, derivados do alfabeto fenício), continua a ser o mais amplamente usado no mundo.
Embora o latim seja hoje uma língua morta, com poucos falantes fluentes e sem que ninguém o tenha por língua materna, ainda é empregado pela Igreja Católica. Exerceu enorme influência sobre diversas línguas vivas, ao servir de fonte vocabular para a ciência, o mundo acadêmico e o direito. O latim vulgar, um dialeto do latim, é o ancestral das línguas neolatinas (italiano, francês, espanhol, português, romeno, catalão, romanche e outros idiomas e dialetos regionais da área); muitas palavras adaptadas do latim foram adotadas por outras línguas modernas, como o inglês. O fato de haver sido a lingua franca do mundo ocidental por mais de mil anos é prova de sua influência.
O latim ainda é a língua oficial da Cidade do Vaticano e do Rito Romano da Igreja Católica. Foi a principal língua litúrgica até o Concílio Vaticano Segundo nos anos 1960. O latim clássico, a língua literária do final da República e do início do Império Romano, ainda hoje é ensinado em muitas escolas primárias e secundárias, embora seu papel se tenha reduzido desde o início do século XX.
- published: 26 Feb 2011
- views: 2443
4:05
CAPITVLVM NONVM - CAVE CANEM - LINGVA LATINA
Latin (lingua latīna, IPA: [laˈtiːna]) is an Italic language originally spoken in Latium a...
published: 14 Mar 2011
CAPITVLVM NONVM - CAVE CANEM - LINGVA LATINA
Latin (lingua latīna, IPA: [laˈtiːna]) is an Italic language originally spoken in Latium and Ancient Rome. Although it is often considered a dead language, a small number of scholars and members of the Christian clergy can speak it fluently, and it continues to be taught in schools and universities. Latin has been, and currently is, used in the process of new word production in modern languages from many different families, including English. Latin and its daughter Romance languages are the only surviving branch of the Italic language family. Other branches, known as Italic languages, are attested in documents surviving from early Italy, but were assimilated during the Roman Republic. The one possible exception is Venetic, the language of the people who settled Venetia, who in Roman times spoke their language in parallel with Latin.
The extensive use of elements from vernacular speech by the earliest authors and inscriptions of the Roman Republic make it clear that the original, unwritten language of the Roman Monarchy was a colloquial form only partly reconstructable called Vulgar Latin. By the late Roman Republic literate persons mainly at Rome had created a standard form from the spoken language of the educated and empowered now called Classical Latin, then called simply Latin or Latinity. The term Vulgar Latin came to mean the various dialects of the citizenry. With the Roman conquest, Latin spread to countries around the Mediterranean, and the vernacular dialects spoken in these areas developed into the Romance languages, including Aragonese, Catalan, Corsican, French, Galician, Italian, Portuguese, Romanian, Romansh, Sardinian, and Spanish. Classical Latin, however, continued to develop after the fall of the Roman Empire and through the Middle Ages, and was used as the language of international communication, scholarship and science until the 18th century, when it was supplanted by vernacular languages.
Latin is a highly inflected language, with three distinct genders, seven noun cases, four verb conjugations, six tenses, six persons, three moods, two voices, two aspects and two numbers. A dual number is rare and archaic. One of the seven cases is the locative case, generally only used with place nouns. The vocative is nearly identical to the nominative. There are only five fully productive cases; accordingly, different authors list five, six or seven as the number of cases. Adjectives and adverbs are compared, and adjectives are inflected for case, gender, and number. Although Latin has demonstrative pronouns indicating varying degree of closeness, it lacks articles. Later Romance language articles developed from the demonstrative pronouns; e.g., le and la from ille and illa. Romance languages were created by simplification of this inflectional complexity in various ways; e.g., uninflected Italian oggi ("today") from the Latin ablative case, hoc die.
O latim é uma antiga língua indo-europeia do ramo itálico originalmente falada no Lácio, a região do entorno de Roma. Foi amplamente difundida, especialmente na Europa, como a língua oficial da República Romana, do Império Romano e, após a conversão deste último ao cristianismo, da Igreja Católica. Através da Igreja, tornou-se a língua dos acadêmicos e filósofos europeus medievais. Por ser uma língua altamente flexiva e sintética, a sua sintaxe (ordem das palavras) é, em alguma medida, variável, se comparada com a de idiomas analíticos como o português, embora em prosa os romanos tendessem a preferir a ordem SOV. A sintaxe é indicada por uma estrutura de afixos ligados a temas. O alfabeto latino, derivado dos alfabetos etrusco e grego (por sua vez, derivados do alfabeto fenício), continua a ser o mais amplamente usado no mundo.
Embora o latim seja hoje uma língua morta, com poucos falantes fluentes e sem que ninguém o tenha por língua materna, ainda é empregado pela Igreja Católica. Exerceu enorme influência sobre diversas línguas vivas, ao servir de fonte vocabular para a ciência, o mundo acadêmico e o direito. O latim vulgar, um dialeto do latim, é o ancestral das línguas neolatinas (italiano, francês, espanhol, português, romeno, catalão, romanche e outros idiomas e dialetos regionais da área); muitas palavras adaptadas do latim foram adotadas por outras línguas modernas, como o inglês. O fato de haver sido a lingua franca do mundo ocidental por mais de mil anos é prova de sua influência.
O latim ainda é a língua oficial da Cidade do Vaticano e do Rito Romano da Igreja Católica. Foi a principal língua litúrgica até o Concílio Vaticano Segundo nos anos 1960. O latim clássico, a língua literária do final da República e do início do Império Romano, ainda hoje é ensinado em muitas escolas primárias e secundárias, embora seu papel se tenha reduzido desde o início do século XX.
- published: 14 Mar 2011
- views: 1649
6:44
CAPITVLVM SEXTVM - CAVE CANEM - LINGVA LATINA
Latin (lingua latīna, IPA: [laˈtiːna]) is an Italic language originally spoken in Latium a...
published: 06 Mar 2011
CAPITVLVM SEXTVM - CAVE CANEM - LINGVA LATINA
Latin (lingua latīna, IPA: [laˈtiːna]) is an Italic language originally spoken in Latium and Ancient Rome. Although it is often considered a dead language, a small number of scholars and members of the Christian clergy can speak it fluently, and it continues to be taught in schools and universities. Latin has been, and currently is, used in the process of new word production in modern languages from many different families, including English. Latin and its daughter Romance languages are the only surviving branch of the Italic language family. Other branches, known as Italic languages, are attested in documents surviving from early Italy, but were assimilated during the Roman Republic. The one possible exception is Venetic, the language of the people who settled Venetia, who in Roman times spoke their language in parallel with Latin.
The extensive use of elements from vernacular speech by the earliest authors and inscriptions of the Roman Republic make it clear that the original, unwritten language of the Roman Monarchy was a colloquial form only partly reconstructable called Vulgar Latin. By the late Roman Republic literate persons mainly at Rome had created a standard form from the spoken language of the educated and empowered now called Classical Latin, then called simply Latin or Latinity. The term Vulgar Latin came to mean the various dialects of the citizenry. With the Roman conquest, Latin spread to countries around the Mediterranean, and the vernacular dialects spoken in these areas developed into the Romance languages, including Aragonese, Catalan, Corsican, French, Galician, Italian, Portuguese, Romanian, Romansh, Sardinian, and Spanish. Classical Latin, however, continued to develop after the fall of the Roman Empire and through the Middle Ages, and was used as the language of international communication, scholarship and science until the 18th century, when it was supplanted by vernacular languages.
Latin is a highly inflected language, with three distinct genders, seven noun cases, four verb conjugations, six tenses, six persons, three moods, two voices, two aspects and two numbers. A dual number is rare and archaic. One of the seven cases is the locative case, generally only used with place nouns. The vocative is nearly identical to the nominative. There are only five fully productive cases; accordingly, different authors list five, six or seven as the number of cases. Adjectives and adverbs are compared, and adjectives are inflected for case, gender, and number. Although Latin has demonstrative pronouns indicating varying degree of closeness, it lacks articles. Later Romance language articles developed from the demonstrative pronouns; e.g., le and la from ille and illa. Romance languages were created by simplification of this inflectional complexity in various ways; e.g., uninflected Italian oggi ("today") from the Latin ablative case, hoc die.
O latim é uma antiga língua indo-europeia do ramo itálico originalmente falada no Lácio, a região do entorno de Roma. Foi amplamente difundida, especialmente na Europa, como a língua oficial da República Romana, do Império Romano e, após a conversão deste último ao cristianismo, da Igreja Católica. Através da Igreja, tornou-se a língua dos acadêmicos e filósofos europeus medievais. Por ser uma língua altamente flexiva e sintética, a sua sintaxe (ordem das palavras) é, em alguma medida, variável, se comparada com a de idiomas analíticos como o português, embora em prosa os romanos tendessem a preferir a ordem SOV. A sintaxe é indicada por uma estrutura de afixos ligados a temas. O alfabeto latino, derivado dos alfabetos etrusco e grego (por sua vez, derivados do alfabeto fenício), continua a ser o mais amplamente usado no mundo.
Embora o latim seja hoje uma língua morta, com poucos falantes fluentes e sem que ninguém o tenha por língua materna, ainda é empregado pela Igreja Católica. Exerceu enorme influência sobre diversas línguas vivas, ao servir de fonte vocabular para a ciência, o mundo acadêmico e o direito. O latim vulgar, um dialeto do latim, é o ancestral das línguas neolatinas (italiano, francês, espanhol, português, romeno, catalão, romanche e outros idiomas e dialetos regionais da área); muitas palavras adaptadas do latim foram adotadas por outras línguas modernas, como o inglês. O fato de haver sido a lingua franca do mundo ocidental por mais de mil anos é prova de sua influência.
O latim ainda é a língua oficial da Cidade do Vaticano e do Rito Romano da Igreja Católica. Foi a principal língua litúrgica até o Concílio Vaticano Segundo nos anos 1960. O latim clássico, a língua literária do final da República e do início do Império Romano, ainda hoje é ensinado em muitas escolas primárias e secundárias, embora seu papel se tenha reduzido desde o início do século XX.
- published: 06 Mar 2011
- views: 1554
5:22
Castello Aragonese Ischia
The musical selections are early Renaissance from the Spanish Neapolitan court of the late...
published: 17 Jul 2011
Castello Aragonese Ischia
The musical selections are early Renaissance from the Spanish Neapolitan court of the late 15th century.
1. Danza Alta (Francisco de la Torre, Cancionero Musical de Palacio, c.1480s), performed by Capella De La Torre
2. Cor Mio Volunturioso (Anonimo, Montecassino Manuscript, c.1480s), performed by Ensemble Micrologus
The photos are taken from my recent trip to Ischia, a small island off the coast of Naples. Most of the images are scenes from or near the rocky fortress of Castello Aragonese which was first settled by early Greek mariners before the 5th century BCE and occupied by Spanish and Neapolitan rulers for more than 400 years (c.1450-1850).
- published: 17 Jul 2011
- views: 1257
9:18
CAPITVLVM SEPTIMVM - CAVE CANEM - LINGVA LATINA
Latin (lingua latīna, IPA: [laˈtiːna]) is an Italic language originally spoken in Latium a...
published: 08 Mar 2011
CAPITVLVM SEPTIMVM - CAVE CANEM - LINGVA LATINA
Latin (lingua latīna, IPA: [laˈtiːna]) is an Italic language originally spoken in Latium and Ancient Rome. Although it is often considered a dead language, a small number of scholars and members of the Christian clergy can speak it fluently, and it continues to be taught in schools and universities. Latin has been, and currently is, used in the process of new word production in modern languages from many different families, including English. Latin and its daughter Romance languages are the only surviving branch of the Italic language family. Other branches, known as Italic languages, are attested in documents surviving from early Italy, but were assimilated during the Roman Republic. The one possible exception is Venetic, the language of the people who settled Venetia, who in Roman times spoke their language in parallel with Latin.
The extensive use of elements from vernacular speech by the earliest authors and inscriptions of the Roman Republic make it clear that the original, unwritten language of the Roman Monarchy was a colloquial form only partly reconstructable called Vulgar Latin. By the late Roman Republic literate persons mainly at Rome had created a standard form from the spoken language of the educated and empowered now called Classical Latin, then called simply Latin or Latinity. The term Vulgar Latin came to mean the various dialects of the citizenry. With the Roman conquest, Latin spread to countries around the Mediterranean, and the vernacular dialects spoken in these areas developed into the Romance languages, including Aragonese, Catalan, Corsican, French, Galician, Italian, Portuguese, Romanian, Romansh, Sardinian, and Spanish. Classical Latin, however, continued to develop after the fall of the Roman Empire and through the Middle Ages, and was used as the language of international communication, scholarship and science until the 18th century, when it was supplanted by vernacular languages.
Latin is a highly inflected language, with three distinct genders, seven noun cases, four verb conjugations, six tenses, six persons, three moods, two voices, two aspects and two numbers. A dual number is rare and archaic. One of the seven cases is the locative case, generally only used with place nouns. The vocative is nearly identical to the nominative. There are only five fully productive cases; accordingly, different authors list five, six or seven as the number of cases. Adjectives and adverbs are compared, and adjectives are inflected for case, gender, and number. Although Latin has demonstrative pronouns indicating varying degree of closeness, it lacks articles. Later Romance language articles developed from the demonstrative pronouns; e.g., le and la from ille and illa. Romance languages were created by simplification of this inflectional complexity in various ways; e.g., uninflected Italian oggi ("today") from the Latin ablative case, hoc die.
O latim é uma antiga língua indo-europeia do ramo itálico originalmente falada no Lácio, a região do entorno de Roma. Foi amplamente difundida, especialmente na Europa, como a língua oficial da República Romana, do Império Romano e, após a conversão deste último ao cristianismo, da Igreja Católica. Através da Igreja, tornou-se a língua dos acadêmicos e filósofos europeus medievais. Por ser uma língua altamente flexiva e sintética, a sua sintaxe (ordem das palavras) é, em alguma medida, variável, se comparada com a de idiomas analíticos como o português, embora em prosa os romanos tendessem a preferir a ordem SOV. A sintaxe é indicada por uma estrutura de afixos ligados a temas. O alfabeto latino, derivado dos alfabetos etrusco e grego (por sua vez, derivados do alfabeto fenício), continua a ser o mais amplamente usado no mundo.
Embora o latim seja hoje uma língua morta, com poucos falantes fluentes e sem que ninguém o tenha por língua materna, ainda é empregado pela Igreja Católica. Exerceu enorme influência sobre diversas línguas vivas, ao servir de fonte vocabular para a ciência, o mundo acadêmico e o direito. O latim vulgar, um dialeto do latim, é o ancestral das línguas neolatinas (italiano, francês, espanhol, português, romeno, catalão, romanche e outros idiomas e dialetos regionais da área); muitas palavras adaptadas do latim foram adotadas por outras línguas modernas, como o inglês. O fato de haver sido a lingua franca do mundo ocidental por mais de mil anos é prova de sua influência.
O latim ainda é a língua oficial da Cidade do Vaticano e do Rito Romano da Igreja Católica. Foi a principal língua litúrgica até o Concílio Vaticano Segundo nos anos 1960. O latim clássico, a língua literária do final da República e do início do Império Romano, ainda hoje é ensinado em muitas escolas primárias e secundárias, embora seu papel se tenha reduzido desde o início do século XX.
- published: 08 Mar 2011
- views: 1310
3:11
CAPITVLVM QVINTVM - CAVE CANEM - LINGVA LATINA
Latin (lingua latīna, IPA: [laˈtiːna]) is an Italic language originally spoken in Latium a...
published: 03 Mar 2011
CAPITVLVM QVINTVM - CAVE CANEM - LINGVA LATINA
Latin (lingua latīna, IPA: [laˈtiːna]) is an Italic language originally spoken in Latium and Ancient Rome. Although it is often considered a dead language, a small number of scholars and members of the Christian clergy can speak it fluently, and it continues to be taught in schools and universities. Latin has been, and currently is, used in the process of new word production in modern languages from many different families, including English. Latin and its daughter Romance languages are the only surviving branch of the Italic language family. Other branches, known as Italic languages, are attested in documents surviving from early Italy, but were assimilated during the Roman Republic. The one possible exception is Venetic, the language of the people who settled Venetia, who in Roman times spoke their language in parallel with Latin.
The extensive use of elements from vernacular speech by the earliest authors and inscriptions of the Roman Republic make it clear that the original, unwritten language of the Roman Monarchy was a colloquial form only partly reconstructable called Vulgar Latin. By the late Roman Republic literate persons mainly at Rome had created a standard form from the spoken language of the educated and empowered now called Classical Latin, then called simply Latin or Latinity. The term Vulgar Latin came to mean the various dialects of the citizenry. With the Roman conquest, Latin spread to countries around the Mediterranean, and the vernacular dialects spoken in these areas developed into the Romance languages, including Aragonese, Catalan, Corsican, French, Galician, Italian, Portuguese, Romanian, Romansh, Sardinian, and Spanish. Classical Latin, however, continued to develop after the fall of the Roman Empire and through the Middle Ages, and was used as the language of international communication, scholarship and science until the 18th century, when it was supplanted by vernacular languages.
Latin is a highly inflected language, with three distinct genders, seven noun cases, four verb conjugations, six tenses, six persons, three moods, two voices, two aspects and two numbers. A dual number is rare and archaic. One of the seven cases is the locative case, generally only used with place nouns. The vocative is nearly identical to the nominative. There are only five fully productive cases; accordingly, different authors list five, six or seven as the number of cases. Adjectives and adverbs are compared, and adjectives are inflected for case, gender, and number. Although Latin has demonstrative pronouns indicating varying degree of closeness, it lacks articles. Later Romance language articles developed from the demonstrative pronouns; e.g., le and la from ille and illa. Romance languages were created by simplification of this inflectional complexity in various ways; e.g., uninflected Italian oggi ("today") from the Latin ablative case, hoc die.
O latim é uma antiga língua indo-europeia do ramo itálico originalmente falada no Lácio, a região do entorno de Roma. Foi amplamente difundida, especialmente na Europa, como a língua oficial da República Romana, do Império Romano e, após a conversão deste último ao cristianismo, da Igreja Católica. Através da Igreja, tornou-se a língua dos acadêmicos e filósofos europeus medievais. Por ser uma língua altamente flexiva e sintética, a sua sintaxe (ordem das palavras) é, em alguma medida, variável, se comparada com a de idiomas analíticos como o português, embora em prosa os romanos tendessem a preferir a ordem SOV. A sintaxe é indicada por uma estrutura de afixos ligados a temas. O alfabeto latino, derivado dos alfabetos etrusco e grego (por sua vez, derivados do alfabeto fenício), continua a ser o mais amplamente usado no mundo.
Embora o latim seja hoje uma língua morta, com poucos falantes fluentes e sem que ninguém o tenha por língua materna, ainda é empregado pela Igreja Católica. Exerceu enorme influência sobre diversas línguas vivas, ao servir de fonte vocabular para a ciência, o mundo acadêmico e o direito. O latim vulgar, um dialeto do latim, é o ancestral das línguas neolatinas (italiano, francês, espanhol, português, romeno, catalão, romanche e outros idiomas e dialetos regionais da área); muitas palavras adaptadas do latim foram adotadas por outras línguas modernas, como o inglês. O fato de haver sido a lingua franca do mundo ocidental por mais de mil anos é prova de sua influência.
O latim ainda é a língua oficial da Cidade do Vaticano e do Rito Romano da Igreja Católica. Foi a principal língua litúrgica até o Concílio Vaticano Segundo nos anos 1960. O latim clássico, a língua literária do final da República e do início do Império Romano, ainda hoje é ensinado em muitas escolas primárias e secundárias, embora seu papel se tenha reduzido desde o início do século XX.
- published: 03 Mar 2011
- views: 1300
4:41
CAPITVLVM QVARTVM - CAVE CANEM - LINGVA LATINA
Latin (lingua latīna, IPA: [laˈtiːna]) is an Italic language originally spoken in Latium a...
published: 28 Feb 2011
CAPITVLVM QVARTVM - CAVE CANEM - LINGVA LATINA
Latin (lingua latīna, IPA: [laˈtiːna]) is an Italic language originally spoken in Latium and Ancient Rome. Although it is often considered a dead language, a small number of scholars and members of the Christian clergy can speak it fluently, and it continues to be taught in schools and universities. Latin has been, and currently is, used in the process of new word production in modern languages from many different families, including English. Latin and its daughter Romance languages are the only surviving branch of the Italic language family. Other branches, known as Italic languages, are attested in documents surviving from early Italy, but were assimilated during the Roman Republic. The one possible exception is Venetic, the language of the people who settled Venetia, who in Roman times spoke their language in parallel with Latin.
The extensive use of elements from vernacular speech by the earliest authors and inscriptions of the Roman Republic make it clear that the original, unwritten language of the Roman Monarchy was a colloquial form only partly reconstructable called Vulgar Latin. By the late Roman Republic literate persons mainly at Rome had created a standard form from the spoken language of the educated and empowered now called Classical Latin, then called simply Latin or Latinity. The term Vulgar Latin came to mean the various dialects of the citizenry. With the Roman conquest, Latin spread to countries around the Mediterranean, and the vernacular dialects spoken in these areas developed into the Romance languages, including Aragonese, Catalan, Corsican, French, Galician, Italian, Portuguese, Romanian, Romansh, Sardinian, and Spanish. Classical Latin, however, continued to develop after the fall of the Roman Empire and through the Middle Ages, and was used as the language of international communication, scholarship and science until the 18th century, when it was supplanted by vernacular languages.
Latin is a highly inflected language, with three distinct genders, seven noun cases, four verb conjugations, six tenses, six persons, three moods, two voices, two aspects and two numbers. A dual number is rare and archaic. One of the seven cases is the locative case, generally only used with place nouns. The vocative is nearly identical to the nominative. There are only five fully productive cases; accordingly, different authors list five, six or seven as the number of cases. Adjectives and adverbs are compared, and adjectives are inflected for case, gender, and number. Although Latin has demonstrative pronouns indicating varying degree of closeness, it lacks articles. Later Romance language articles developed from the demonstrative pronouns; e.g., le and la from ille and illa. Romance languages were created by simplification of this inflectional complexity in various ways; e.g., uninflected Italian oggi ("today") from the Latin ablative case, hoc die.
O latim é uma antiga língua indo-europeia do ramo itálico originalmente falada no Lácio, a região do entorno de Roma. Foi amplamente difundida, especialmente na Europa, como a língua oficial da República Romana, do Império Romano e, após a conversão deste último ao cristianismo, da Igreja Católica. Através da Igreja, tornou-se a língua dos acadêmicos e filósofos europeus medievais. Por ser uma língua altamente flexiva e sintética, a sua sintaxe (ordem das palavras) é, em alguma medida, variável, se comparada com a de idiomas analíticos como o português, embora em prosa os romanos tendessem a preferir a ordem SOV. A sintaxe é indicada por uma estrutura de afixos ligados a temas. O alfabeto latino, derivado dos alfabetos etrusco e grego (por sua vez, derivados do alfabeto fenício), continua a ser o mais amplamente usado no mundo.
Embora o latim seja hoje uma língua morta, com poucos falantes fluentes e sem que ninguém o tenha por língua materna, ainda é empregado pela Igreja Católica. Exerceu enorme influência sobre diversas línguas vivas, ao servir de fonte vocabular para a ciência, o mundo acadêmico e o direito. O latim vulgar, um dialeto do latim, é o ancestral das línguas neolatinas (italiano, francês, espanhol, português, romeno, catalão, romanche e outros idiomas e dialetos regionais da área); muitas palavras adaptadas do latim foram adotadas por outras línguas modernas, como o inglês. O fato de haver sido a lingua franca do mundo ocidental por mais de mil anos é prova de sua influência.
O latim ainda é a língua oficial da Cidade do Vaticano e do Rito Romano da Igreja Católica. Foi a principal língua litúrgica até o Concílio Vaticano Segundo nos anos 1960. O latim clássico, a língua literária do final da República e do início do Império Romano, ainda hoje é ensinado em muitas escolas primárias e secundárias, embora seu papel se tenha reduzido desde o início do século XX.
- published: 28 Feb 2011
- views: 1687
Youtube results:
5:06
CAPITVLVM PRIMVM - CAVE CANEM - LINGVA LATINA
Latin (lingua latīna, IPA: [laˈtiːna]) is an Italic language originally spoken in Latium a...
published: 22 Feb 2011
CAPITVLVM PRIMVM - CAVE CANEM - LINGVA LATINA
Latin (lingua latīna, IPA: [laˈtiːna]) is an Italic language originally spoken in Latium and Ancient Rome. Although it is often considered a dead language, a small number of scholars and members of the Christian clergy can speak it fluently, and it continues to be taught in schools and universities. Latin has been, and currently is, used in the process of new word production in modern languages from many different families, including English. Latin and its daughter Romance languages are the only surviving branch of the Italic language family. Other branches, known as Italic languages, are attested in documents surviving from early Italy, but were assimilated during the Roman Republic. The one possible exception is Venetic, the language of the people who settled Venetia, who in Roman times spoke their language in parallel with Latin.
The extensive use of elements from vernacular speech by the earliest authors and inscriptions of the Roman Republic make it clear that the original, unwritten language of the Roman Monarchy was a colloquial form only partly reconstructable called Vulgar Latin. By the late Roman Republic literate persons mainly at Rome had created a standard form from the spoken language of the educated and empowered now called Classical Latin, then called simply Latin or Latinity. The term Vulgar Latin came to mean the various dialects of the citizenry. With the Roman conquest, Latin spread to countries around the Mediterranean, and the vernacular dialects spoken in these areas developed into the Romance languages, including Aragonese, Catalan, Corsican, French, Galician, Italian, Portuguese, Romanian, Romansh, Sardinian, and Spanish. Classical Latin, however, continued to develop after the fall of the Roman Empire and through the Middle Ages, and was used as the language of international communication, scholarship and science until the 18th century, when it was supplanted by vernacular languages.
Latin is a highly inflected language, with three distinct genders, seven noun cases, four verb conjugations, six tenses, six persons, three moods, two voices, two aspects and two numbers. A dual number is rare and archaic. One of the seven cases is the locative case, generally only used with place nouns. The vocative is nearly identical to the nominative. There are only five fully productive cases; accordingly, different authors list five, six or seven as the number of cases. Adjectives and adverbs are compared, and adjectives are inflected for case, gender, and number. Although Latin has demonstrative pronouns indicating varying degree of closeness, it lacks articles. Later Romance language articles developed from the demonstrative pronouns; e.g., le and la from ille and illa. Romance languages were created by simplification of this inflectional complexity in various ways; e.g., uninflected Italian oggi ("today") from the Latin ablative case, hoc die.
O latim é uma antiga língua indo-europeia do ramo itálico originalmente falada no Lácio, a região do entorno de Roma. Foi amplamente difundida, especialmente na Europa, como a língua oficial da República Romana, do Império Romano e, após a conversão deste último ao cristianismo, da Igreja Católica. Através da Igreja, tornou-se a língua dos acadêmicos e filósofos europeus medievais. Por ser uma língua altamente flexiva e sintética, a sua sintaxe (ordem das palavras) é, em alguma medida, variável, se comparada com a de idiomas analíticos como o português, embora em prosa os romanos tendessem a preferir a ordem SOV. A sintaxe é indicada por uma estrutura de afixos ligados a temas. O alfabeto latino, derivado dos alfabetos etrusco e grego (por sua vez, derivados do alfabeto fenício), continua a ser o mais amplamente usado no mundo.
Embora o latim seja hoje uma língua morta, com poucos falantes fluentes e sem que ninguém o tenha por língua materna, ainda é empregado pela Igreja Católica. Exerceu enorme influência sobre diversas línguas vivas, ao servir de fonte vocabular para a ciência, o mundo acadêmico e o direito. O latim vulgar, um dialeto do latim, é o ancestral das línguas neolatinas (italiano, francês, espanhol, português, romeno, catalão, romanche e outros idiomas e dialetos regionais da área); muitas palavras adaptadas do latim foram adotadas por outras línguas modernas, como o inglês. O fato de haver sido a lingua franca do mundo ocidental por mais de mil anos é prova de sua influência.
O latim ainda é a língua oficial da Cidade do Vaticano e do Rito Romano da Igreja Católica. Foi a principal língua litúrgica até o Concílio Vaticano Segundo nos anos 1960. O latim clássico, a língua literária do final da República e do início do Império Romano, ainda hoje é ensinado em muitas escolas primárias e secundárias, embora seu papel se tenha reduzido desde o início do século XX.
- published: 22 Feb 2011
- views: 6674
2:23
Napoli Aragonese - Que feray ie...- La vida de Colin. - Micrologus. - ***Arazzo di Bayeux.
Napoli Aragonese -
Que feray ie mal fortunè - La vida de Colin. -
Ensemble Micrologus. -
*...
published: 27 Dec 2012
Napoli Aragonese - Que feray ie...- La vida de Colin. - Micrologus. - ***Arazzo di Bayeux.
Napoli Aragonese -
Que feray ie mal fortunè - La vida de Colin. -
Ensemble Micrologus. -
***Arazzo di Bayeux.
Que faray ie mal fortunè
quant je suis ja
Tener me fault a ma fusée
comant une femme
La vida de Colin no dura tuos jors
Comant ils se governant ses gentils companyons
Comant ils se governant ses gentils companyons
Ils vont a la taverna con gran devocion.
- published: 27 Dec 2012
- views: 55
7:27
CAPITVLVM OCTAVVM - CAVE CANEM - LINGVA LATINA
Latin (lingua latīna, IPA: [laˈtiːna]) is an Italic language originally spoken in Latium a...
published: 09 Mar 2011
CAPITVLVM OCTAVVM - CAVE CANEM - LINGVA LATINA
Latin (lingua latīna, IPA: [laˈtiːna]) is an Italic language originally spoken in Latium and Ancient Rome. Although it is often considered a dead language, a small number of scholars and members of the Christian clergy can speak it fluently, and it continues to be taught in schools and universities. Latin has been, and currently is, used in the process of new word production in modern languages from many different families, including English. Latin and its daughter Romance languages are the only surviving branch of the Italic language family. Other branches, known as Italic languages, are attested in documents surviving from early Italy, but were assimilated during the Roman Republic. The one possible exception is Venetic, the language of the people who settled Venetia, who in Roman times spoke their language in parallel with Latin.
The extensive use of elements from vernacular speech by the earliest authors and inscriptions of the Roman Republic make it clear that the original, unwritten language of the Roman Monarchy was a colloquial form only partly reconstructable called Vulgar Latin. By the late Roman Republic literate persons mainly at Rome had created a standard form from the spoken language of the educated and empowered now called Classical Latin, then called simply Latin or Latinity. The term Vulgar Latin came to mean the various dialects of the citizenry. With the Roman conquest, Latin spread to countries around the Mediterranean, and the vernacular dialects spoken in these areas developed into the Romance languages, including Aragonese, Catalan, Corsican, French, Galician, Italian, Portuguese, Romanian, Romansh, Sardinian, and Spanish. Classical Latin, however, continued to develop after the fall of the Roman Empire and through the Middle Ages, and was used as the language of international communication, scholarship and science until the 18th century, when it was supplanted by vernacular languages.
Latin is a highly inflected language, with three distinct genders, seven noun cases, four verb conjugations, six tenses, six persons, three moods, two voices, two aspects and two numbers. A dual number is rare and archaic. One of the seven cases is the locative case, generally only used with place nouns. The vocative is nearly identical to the nominative. There are only five fully productive cases; accordingly, different authors list five, six or seven as the number of cases. Adjectives and adverbs are compared, and adjectives are inflected for case, gender, and number. Although Latin has demonstrative pronouns indicating varying degree of closeness, it lacks articles. Later Romance language articles developed from the demonstrative pronouns; e.g., le and la from ille and illa. Romance languages were created by simplification of this inflectional complexity in various ways; e.g., uninflected Italian oggi ("today") from the Latin ablative case, hoc die.
O latim é uma antiga língua indo-europeia do ramo itálico originalmente falada no Lácio, a região do entorno de Roma. Foi amplamente difundida, especialmente na Europa, como a língua oficial da República Romana, do Império Romano e, após a conversão deste último ao cristianismo, da Igreja Católica. Através da Igreja, tornou-se a língua dos acadêmicos e filósofos europeus medievais. Por ser uma língua altamente flexiva e sintética, a sua sintaxe (ordem das palavras) é, em alguma medida, variável, se comparada com a de idiomas analíticos como o português, embora em prosa os romanos tendessem a preferir a ordem SOV. A sintaxe é indicada por uma estrutura de afixos ligados a temas. O alfabeto latino, derivado dos alfabetos etrusco e grego (por sua vez, derivados do alfabeto fenício), continua a ser o mais amplamente usado no mundo.
Embora o latim seja hoje uma língua morta, com poucos falantes fluentes e sem que ninguém o tenha por língua materna, ainda é empregado pela Igreja Católica. Exerceu enorme influência sobre diversas línguas vivas, ao servir de fonte vocabular para a ciência, o mundo acadêmico e o direito. O latim vulgar, um dialeto do latim, é o ancestral das línguas neolatinas (italiano, francês, espanhol, português, romeno, catalão, romanche e outros idiomas e dialetos regionais da área); muitas palavras adaptadas do latim foram adotadas por outras línguas modernas, como o inglês. O fato de haver sido a lingua franca do mundo ocidental por mais de mil anos é prova de sua influência.
O latim ainda é a língua oficial da Cidade do Vaticano e do Rito Romano da Igreja Católica. Foi a principal língua litúrgica até o Concílio Vaticano Segundo nos anos 1960. O latim clássico, a língua literária do final da República e do início do Império Romano, ainda hoje é ensinado em muitas escolas primárias e secundárias, embora seu papel se tenha reduzido desde o início do século XX.
- published: 09 Mar 2011
- views: 3907
8:00
Words of Life GALICIAN (galego) People/Language Movie Trailer
See http://wlmov.com/program/c05891 for the full Words of Life GALICIAN Movie
..........
...
published: 20 Mar 2009
Words of Life GALICIAN (galego) People/Language Movie Trailer
See http://wlmov.com/program/c05891 for the full Words of Life GALICIAN Movie
..........
This is: Words of Life GALICIAN (galego) People/Language Movie Trailer c05891 [c05891t]
Other names for this language are: Galego, Gallego, galego
This language is spoken in: Argentina, Portugal, Spain (España, Espanya, Espainia, Espanha)
This movie concerns: movie movies video videos music song songs mp3 God Allah Jesus Christ real exist exists early life crucifixion tomb Bible Christian Christians church gospel injil hope help life Global Recordings Network language free world language movies
For more information on this program see http://globalrecordings.net/program/c05891
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- published: 20 Mar 2009
- views: 4139