Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
Latin To Be Introduced At 40 State Secondaries In England
//£4m scheme will form part of government effort to counter subject’s reputation as elitist//
https:/ /www.th eguardi an.com/ educati on/2021 /jul/31 /latin- introdu ced-40- state-s econdar ies-eng land
A difficult one. I tend to think that teaching modern languages is more beneficial to the majority - but I would welcome teaching Latin selectively - which makes it elitist. No?
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A difficult one. I tend to think that teaching modern languages is more beneficial to the majority - but I would welcome teaching Latin selectively - which makes it elitist. No?
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Tomus, modern languages are more difficult... :-). And, if you do Latin, you still have to do a modern language on top, as I said earlier.
Although, when we went to Italy, my dad was fully able to understand Italian (although not speak it well) purely because he knew Latin. And that's the same with many languages. It does help.
Although, when we went to Italy, my dad was fully able to understand Italian (although not speak it well) purely because he knew Latin. And that's the same with many languages. It does help.
That's it, Pixie.
Latin is a useful adjunct to learning a modern language.
I've been learning Swedish for quite a while. Although it's a Germanic language (as is English), it shares a lot with Latin in, not only word meanings, but grammar rules, word order, genders... the nuts and bolts of language.
Latin is a useful adjunct to learning a modern language.
I've been learning Swedish for quite a while. Although it's a Germanic language (as is English), it shares a lot with Latin in, not only word meanings, but grammar rules, word order, genders... the nuts and bolts of language.
well ! you all seem to be having a lot of fun !
Common names of plants vary among languages and even among regions within a single country -
No actually they dont ( Naomi screams her bits off with a direct contradiction ) butI am sure AH can stand the move.
and the name shows conservation ( linguistic conservation that is! lack of mutation ) - and steggie ( dat short for steggosaurus innit) used Larix goes to our Larch
Kaempfer would be the fella to first say it was a separate species
elm hateth man and waiteth..... latin elmus
quercus - cut orf the qu ( er prune the qu ) and you get oak
pinus pine
prunus - prune
hedera - ivy OK has to be some exception
so the names of plants (trees) tend not to change over time
( historical linguists will say 'oh that is because they were worshipped as sacred objects, and the name of a god has special power - see commandment 1)
Common names of plants vary among languages and even among regions within a single country -
No actually they dont ( Naomi screams her bits off with a direct contradiction ) butI am sure AH can stand the move.
and the name shows conservation ( linguistic conservation that is! lack of mutation ) - and steggie ( dat short for steggosaurus innit) used Larix goes to our Larch
Kaempfer would be the fella to first say it was a separate species
elm hateth man and waiteth..... latin elmus
quercus - cut orf the qu ( er prune the qu ) and you get oak
pinus pine
prunus - prune
hedera - ivy OK has to be some exception
so the names of plants (trees) tend not to change over time
( historical linguists will say 'oh that is because they were worshipped as sacred objects, and the name of a god has special power - see commandment 1)
-- answer removed --
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