Latin

   

Alternative meanings: See Latin (disambiguation)
Latin (Lingua Latina)
Spoken Vatican City
Region Italic peninsula
Total speakers extinct
Dialects -
Genetic
classification
Indo-European

 Italic
  Latin

Official status
Official language Vatican City
Regulated by none
Language codes
ISO 639-1 la
ISO 639-2 lat
SIL LTN

Latin was the language originally spoken in the region around Rome called Latium. It gained great importance as the formal language of the Roman Empire.

All Romance languages are descended from Latin, and many words based on Latin are found in other modern languages such as English. It is said that 80% of scholarly English words are somehow derived from Latin. Moreover, in the Western world, Latin was a lingua franca, the learned language for scientific and political affairs, for more than a thousand years, being eventually replaced by French in the 18th century and English in the late 19th. Ecclesiastical Latin remains the formal language of the Roman Catholic Church to this day, which makes it the official national language of the Vatican. The Church continued to use Latin as its liturgical language until the 1960s. It is also still used, along with Greek, to furnish the names used in the scientific classification of living things. The closest living common language to Latin is Italian.

Main features

Latin is a synthetic or inflectional language: affixes are attached to fixed stems to express gender, number, and case in adjectives, nouns, and pronouns, which is called declension; and person, number, tense, voice, mood, and aspect in verbs, which is called conjugation. There are five declensions of nouns and four conjugations of verbs.

The six noun cases are:

  1. nominative (used of the subject of the verb),
  2. genitive (used to indicate relation or possession),
  3. dative (used of the indirect object of the verb, often represented by the English "to" or "for"),
  4. accusative (used of the direct object of the verb),
  5. ablative (separation, source, cause, or instrument, often represented by the English "by", "with", "from"),
  6. vocative (used of the person or thing being addressed).


In addition, there exists in some nouns a locative case used to express place (normally expressed by the ablative with a preposition such as IN), but this hold-over from Indo-European is only found in the names of lakes, cities, towns, similar locales, and a few other words.

Latin and Romance

After the collapse of the Roman Empire, Latin evolved into the various Romance languages. These were for many centuries only spoken languages, Latin being still used for writing. (E.g. Latin was the official language of Portugal until 1296 when it was replaced by Portuguese.)

Actually the Romance languages are not derived from Classical Latin but rather from the spoken Vulgar Latin. Latin and Romance differ (for example) in that Romance had distinctive stress, whereas Latin had distinctive length of vowels. In Italian and Sardo logudorese, there is distinctive length of consonants and stress, in Spanish only distinctive stress, and in French even stress is no longer distinctive.

Another major distinction between Romance and Latin is that Romance languages, excluding Romanian, have lost their case endings in most words except for some pronouns. Romanian still has five cases (though the ablative case is no longer represented).

Latin and English

English grammar is not a direct derivative of Latin grammar. Attempts to make English grammar fit Latin rules — such as the contrived prohibition against the split infinitive — have not worked successfully in regular usage. However, as many as half the words in English were derived from Latin, including many words of Greek origin first adopted by the Romans, not to mention the thousands of French, Spanish, and Italian words of Latin origin that have also enriched English.

During the 16th and on through the 18th century English writers created huge numbers of new words from Latin and Greek roots. These words, dubbed "inkpot" words (as if they had spilled from a pot of ink), were rich in flavor and meaning. Many of these words were used once by the author and then forgotten, but some remain. Imbibe, extrapolate, and inebriation are all inkpot terms carved from Latin and Greek words.

Latin, at one time, was commonly taught in most English schools. However, since the introduction of the Modern Language GCSE, Latin has gradually been phased out. Now, however, it, along with other Classic languages are being taught by more schools.

See also

About the Latin language

About the Latin literary heritage

Other related topics


Ages of Latin
—75 BC 75 BC – 1st c. 2nd c. – 8th c. 9th c. – 15th c. 15th c. - 17th c. 17th c. – present
Old Latin Golden Age Latin Silver Age Latin
(Classical Latin)
Late Latin Medieval Latin Humanist Latin New Latin


External links




ast:Llatín ca:Llatí cy:Lladin da:Latin de:Latein eo:Latina lingvo es:Latín fi: Latina fr:Latin hu:Latin id:Latin is:Latína it:Latino ja:ラテン語 la:Lingua Latina nds:Latinsch nl:Latijn pl:Åacina pt:latim ro:Latină ru:Латинский язык simple:Latin sl:latinščina sq:Gjuha Latinishte sr:Латински језик sv:Latin zh:拉丁语

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