Jump to content
UNRV Ancient Roman Empire Forums

Pronunciation - Words & Names


Caius Maxentius

Recommended Posts

There are a bunch of words and names I've read, but never heard. Does anyone know how they're pronounced, and what syllable gets the emphasis?

 

In particular: aedile, mos maiorum, Odovacer/Odoacer, Stilicho, Cassivalaunus.

 

With certain plural words, like "frumentarii" is the last syllable an "ee" sound or is it "ee-eye?"

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 74
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Some will correct me if I'm wrong on these but

 

aedile= eye-dial (as in sundial)

 

mos maiorum= mos (as in mosque) may (as in mayor) or (as in orbit) um

 

Odovacer= Odo-wa-ker (the -er sound in -ker is pronoucend like air)

 

Stilicho= Sstee (make the long -ss sound, not a -z sound) lee-cho

 

Cassivalaunus= Kassee-wal-aun(as in aunt)-us

 

I'm sure people with more skill will come back and correct me, I'm not good at doing word pronounciation on paper...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Sextus, your pronunciation are good, but I would make the following changes:

 

aedile = ah-ay-dee-lay (the ah-ay can be pronounced like the word "eye")

 

stilicho = the "ch" comes from the greek "Chi" (X) and is pronounced with an aspirated hard "c" like this: kho = stee - lee - kho

 

finally, "ii" is pronounced "ee-ee"

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If you prefer I can scan a page about latin pronunciation from my book?

 

In reality, pronunciation doesn't really matter to the Romans that much as long as you get the idea or message across by use good sentence construction, unless you're a politician.

Edited by FLavius Valerius Constantinus
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Sextus, your pronunciation are good, but I would make the following changes:

 

aedile = ah-ay-dee-lay (the ah-ay can be pronounced like the word "eye")

 

stilicho = the "ch" comes from the greek "Chi" (X) and is pronounced with an aspirated hard "c" like this: kho = stee - lee - kho

 

finally, "ii" is pronounced "ee-ee"

 

Your right, I was running on automatic there.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks for these replies!

 

Do you want actual, proper "ancient" pronounciation or modern pronounciation? In most cases, the two are very different.

 

I didn't know about this -- is modern pronounciation roughly the same as ecclesiastical/Catholic Latin? I'm mainly curious about the ancient pronounciation.

 

If you prefer I can scan a page about latin pronunciation from my book?

 

That would be very helpful. Thanks!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Do you want actual, proper "ancient" pronounciation or modern pronounciation? In most cases, the two are very different (for instance modern Julius Caesar=ancient "yoo-lee-oos kah-hee-zah")

 

Another couple of corrections to this: ae is a diphthong, i.e. one syllable, with no 'h' before the 'e', probably sounding something like the y in English 'my'; and a final 'r' has to be pronounced in Latin, though exactly how it was pronounced is another question -- so the final 'h' is wrong. For Caesar try 'ky-sar', I would say.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Another couple of corrections to this: ae is a diphthong, i.e. one syllable, with no 'h' before the 'e', probably sounding something like the y in English 'my'; and a final 'r' has to be pronounced in Latin, though exactly how it was pronounced is another question -- so the final 'h' is wrong. For Caesar try 'ky-sar', I would say.

 

According to what I was taught (by an old Latin professor whose father was an even older Latin professor), final -r was variable, and therefore could be like 'English r' (a retroflex liquid) or a 'Romance r' (an alveolar tap--think Spanish or Italian).

 

Right on the diphthongs: ae sounded kinda like English 'eye'.

 

Final note: all Cs and Gs are meant to be hard--but this changed as early as the 6th century, since this was an early change in the Romance languages--and V sounded like an English W--hence the early confusing in all early Romance languages, and continued confusion of b/v in Spanish.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You guys make it seem so complicated. :)

 

When I was learning Latin in class, all they told me that I needed to know is that c and g are hard sounds. That the U is V when reading, and that there is absolutely no W or J.

 

Also to add, in latin, you would only use the Z and Y for Greek derived words.

 

See, not all that hard. :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Needless to say, the Roman alphabet was designed specifically for the Latin language, thus every sound is represented. This being the case, Latin is extremely easy to pronounce properly once one learns the few simple rules. It is only in cases like dipthongs (which are really just instances where Latin speakers smushed the sound of two vowels into the space of one) and Greek letters (ch, ph, th, etc.) that Romans had to "adjust" their rules.

 

English, being the hodge-podge that it is, does not have the advantage of consistency that Latin does.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 months later...
Guest Radius Cuius

Hi!

Today, people have different kinds of methods to pronouce Latin. The ecclesiastical method is usually used in church services and is base on modern Italian pronunciation. The reconstructed "Classical method" is usually taught in Latin classes, for pronoucing poetry and ancient literatures.

 

Here is the pronunciation in both methods:

 

Classical Ecclesiastical

aedile= ['ai-di-le] ['e:-di-le]

 

mos maiorum= Similar in both methods, [mo:s] [ma:jorum]

 

Odovacer= [odo'waker] [odo'vacher]

 

Stilicho= Similar in both methods, ['stiliko]

 

Cassivalaunus= [kassiwa'launus] [kassiva'launus]

 

Notice that "r" in Latin should be sound like Spanish or Italian (trilled R) no matter where r is in a word, prevent the retroflex r in English.

 

I made a webpage on Latin pronunciation lately, hope this may help a bit:

http://www.melop.net/phlatina/

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


×
×
  • Create New...