Jen?

Sep. 28th, 2001 01:05 pm
silversolitaire: (d'oh!)
[personal profile] silversolitaire
What does "Freedom, for everyone, always" been in Latin?

Liberitas... semper... I don't know "for everyone"! heh...
ext_12394: (Default)
From: [identity profile] lysimache.livejournal.com
omnes is nominative (=subject of sentence). 'pro' means 'for, on behalf of, in place of'. You'd use the dative case (to/for -- indirect object) in that phrase:

libertas omnibus semper

I'm only guessing about the case of libertas though, based on the fact that mottoes usually use the nominative. In real Latin, it should probably be an accusative of exclamation (=libertatem omnibus semper!), and what this sounds like to me, but this may just be a nationalist bias, is the end of the pledge of allegiance (which has been, oddly enough, translated into Latin and memorized by generations of American Latin students)... ...cum libertate justitaque omnibus...

Basically, my answer would be: libertas omnibus semper. :)

d'oh...

Date: 2001-09-28 10:26 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] silversolitaire.livejournal.com
Now that I'm reading this... makes sense. Omnibus... yes... ehehehe... *blush*

Thanks a lot!

Re: d'oh...

Date: 2001-09-28 01:28 pm (UTC)
ext_12394: (Default)
From: [identity profile] lysimache.livejournal.com
Oh, please, nothing to feel even the bittiest bit dumb about! I mean, compared to some of the Latin my students come up with... that was just beautiful.

I swear, they just throw random endings on the nouns. And the verbs. A sentence like

The farmers' daughters carry the water

will end up

filias agricolum portas aqua.
[daughters--acc pl. f.] [farmer acc. sg. m][carry, 2nd. s = you carry] [water -- nom. sg.]

For real. It's awful. And frustrating...

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