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Cargando... Amo, Amas, Amat... and All That: How to Become a Latin Lover (2006)por Harry Mount
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. I undertook and passed (barely) 6 semesters of undergraduate Latin. the end result is that I can now read Latin with some difficulty. I will never be able to write it, or (God forbid!) speak it. Why this damn language should be so hard to learn is beyond me, after all illiterate peasants and slaves learnt it. In any case, the author does his level best to make Latin, and not without some success. the light-hearted friendly tone of the book is a pleasant contrast to the dour texts I remember, and the book is full of interesting tidbits of information. Unfortuantely it will take a lot more than this to expunge my nightmarish recollections of subjunctives, gerundives, passives and the whole blooming mess. While I love all things ancient and Roman, and can have a go at translating easy bits of Latin, I can’t claim to be able to write it at all. I can hear you exclaiming, “But you have a Latin motto on your blog! ("Noli domo egredi, nisi librum habes – Never leave home without a book".) What’s that all about then?” “Simples!” (as Alexandr Meerkat would say – sorry!) – Mottos just sound better in Latin. I did have a go at writing it myself with the aid of a quite scholarly grown-up teach yourself Latin book Learn Latin. In the end though I needed help, and my colleague Dr Ridd from Abingdon School sorted my schoolgirl Latin out. Then my other half gave me this book for Christmas. It combines all the Latin grammar an amateur needs, with added bits about all things Latin and Roman. These include discussions on the famous Monty Python sketch in Life of Brian and Jeeves’ propensity to spout bits of Latin amongst other references. Also included is an etymological list of common Latin expressions in use in English today. All of this is written in a jocular fashion and is thoroughly entertaining. I’m sure a bit more of the language has sunk in. I’ve certainly got a new appreciation for many a Latin phrase, but also much English grammar along the way. I also found out that the author despises the Cambridge Latin course – which was a rather touchy-feely way of teaching Latin introduced into schools in the 1970s (and still going). Of course that’s how I learned my Latin! About a third of the O-Level marks were for earned for spouting about ancient Roman life – which was fab. Unfortunately, you didn’t have to learn conjugations and declensions off by heart as in the trad approach, so while you could always translate the stems - you didn’t always get the sense of the syntax/grammar properly. I still managed to get an ‘A’, but possibly because we had previously translated the ‘unseen’ Pliny passage in the exam for prep the month before, and I really did know my set text Virgil off by heart … If you want to brush up your grammar and learn how to use Latin in everyday English, this book will be really useful in a fun way; as a Latin primer though, it’s far too much fun (but good for revision)! sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
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Mount also devotes an entire chapter to picking up on some work by Kingsley Amis where he divided English language pedants into Berks and Wankers, and again, like a spotty 15 year old boy, he delights in using the word 'wanker' prolifically throughout the rest of the book to describe the Latin language equivalents. I'm not a language prude - it just felt a bit wearingly juvenile after a while.
So what about the Latin? Well, that was interesting, and I enjoyed revision of many aspects of the language (I studied Latin to GCSE at school) interspersed with interesting facts about the Romans and modern day use of Latin). Mount seems to expect that if you've studied Latin at some point in the distant past then by the end of the book you'll be translating as if you've never stepped away from it, but unfortunately my brain matter felt rather 'closed cell' when it came to absorbing much, and it would take many, many more reads of this text and others before I'd be able to write a single sentence unaided again (by the end of the book I decided the 15 year old me must have been some kind of child genius to figure this stuff out first time around).
All in all interesting enough (and Boris Johnson got a mention - who knew back in 2006 where he'd be now), and I may refer back to it again in the future when I've got more head space for properly brushing up on Latin.
3.5 stars - an interesting and light-hearted approach, but definitely too 'try hard' where the humour was concerned. ( )