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1

Gravel, Martin. "Of Palaces, Hunts, and Pork Roast: Deciphering the Last Chapters of the Capitulary of Quierzy (a. 877)." Florilegium 29, no. 1 (2012): 89–115. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/flor.29.004.

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Politics depends on personal contacts. This is true in today’s world, and it was certainly true in early medieval states. Even in the Carolingian empire, the largest Western polity of the period, power depended on relations built on personal contacts. In an effort to nurture such necessary relationships, the sovereign moved with his court, within a network of important political “communication centres”; in the ninth century, the foremost among these were his palaces, along with certain cities and religious sanctuaries. And thus, in contemporaneous sources, the Latin term palatium often designa
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2

Isar, Nicoletta. "The Sounding Waters. Performing World Harmony at Aquisgranum." Das Mittelalter 23, no. 2 (2018): 331–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/mial-2018-0018.

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AbstractThis paper explores the issue of performative spaces in the medieval Latin Church, examining the mindsets of the time and the ways practitioners adopted the Platonic notion of world harmony. We then look at the Palatine Chapel of Aachen (Latin Aquisgranum) in the light of the Plato’s doctrine. At the heart of this analysis will be the cosmological drama at the creation of the world, described by Ambrose as a chorus of the constitutive elements. It is from this image that the proto-model of the Christian Church as ‘moving waters’ was derived, a vision shared by both the Eastern and the
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3

Horsfall, Nicholas. "Empty Shelves on the Palatine." Greece and Rome 40, no. 1 (1993): 58–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0017383500022609.

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The way we study Augustus’ Rome has been changing dramatically: I do not mean so much new discoveries of monuments or inscriptions, exciting though they have been, as the new-found disposition of archaeologists, art-historians, epigraphists, and Latinists to talk to each other and to admit cross-fertilization into their work; this spirit of co-operation has engendered a large bibliography, and one only regrets that the sort of multidisciplinary approach that was self-evident to the best Hellenists in Germany 150 years ago has been so painfully slow in reaching Latin studies!
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4

Khoury, Richard, and Francesca Sapsford. "Latin word stemming using Wiktionary:." Digital Scholarship in the Humanities 31, no. 2 (2015): 368–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/llc/fqv008.

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5

Salvador-González, José María. "The House/Palace in Annunciations of the 15th Century." Eikon / Imago 10 (February 8, 2021): 391–406. http://dx.doi.org/10.5209/eiko.74161.

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This article seeks to highlight the doctrinal meanings enclosed in the representation of the house of Mary in the form of a palace or an aristocratic residence in seven images of the Annunciation of the 15th century. To justify our iconographic interpretations in this sense, we based on the analysis of many exegetical comments with which many Latin Fathers and theologians interpreted several metaphorical expressions with dogmatic projection, such as domus Sapientiae, domus Dei, aula regia, palatium Regis, domicilium Trinitatis, and other analogous terms. As a methodological strategy, we use he
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6

Phelps, Patricia H., and Susan Peterson. "Building Word Power through Latin Lingo." Middle School Journal 22, no. 2 (1990): 19–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00940771.1990.11495130.

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7

Choi, Ji-Young. "Spanish archaic word of Latin American." Latin American and Caribbean Studies 38, no. 2 (2019): 199–222. http://dx.doi.org/10.17855/jlas.2019.5.38.2.199.

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8

Hock, Hans Henrich. "Latin influence on German word order?" Belgian Journal of Linguistics 33 (December 31, 2019): 183–209. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/bjl.00027.hoc.

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Abstract Behaghel’s claim that verb finality in German dependent clauses (DCs) reflects Latin influence (1892, 1932) has been revived by Chirita (1997, 2003). According to Chirita, DC word order remains variable up to Early New High German, while in Latin, verb-finality is more frequent in DCs than main clauses (MCs); hence, she claims, German verb finality reflects Latin influence. This papers shows that the arguments for Latin influence are problematic and that the Modern German word order difference between MCs and DCs can be explained as the ultimate outcome of developments that started in
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9

Elerick, Charles. "Latin Word Order: Living on the Edge." Classical World 86, no. 1 (1992): 21. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/4351194.

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10

Greenberg, Nathan A. "Word Juncture in Latin Prose and Poetry." Transactions of the American Philological Association (1974-) 121 (1991): 297. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/284456.

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11

Spevak, Olga. "Latin Word Order. Structured Meaning and Information." Mnemosyne 60, no. 3 (2007): 497–501. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156852507x195592.

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12

White, John F. "Blitz Latin Revisited." Journal of Classics Teaching 16, no. 32 (2015): 43–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s2058631015000203.

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SummaryDevelopment of the machine translator Blitz Latin between the years 2002 and 2015 is discussed. Key issues remain the ambiguity in meaning of Latin stems and inflections, and the word order of the Latin language. Attempts to improve machine translation of Latin are described by the programmer.
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13

Jasińska, Katarzyna, and Dariusz R. Piwowarczyk. "On the Relatinization of the Latin Term 'magister'." Classica Cracoviensia 21 (July 2, 2019): 95–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.12797/cc.21.2018.21.06.

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The expansion of the linguistic lexicon by means of loanwords is a common phenomenon. During this process the word is taken from the donor language and assimilated in the system of the recipient language. Loanword adaptation is carried out on the semantic and formal level which concerns the pronunciation, spelling and grammatical characteristics of a word in question. In this article we present the case of the Latin word magister concentrating on its phonetic accommodation and process of its relatinization after the original borrowing in the Old Polish language. The word was relatinized in Pol
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14

Hulstaert, Kristien. "Reading, seeing and understanding Latin." Journal of Latin Linguistics 18, no. 1-2 (2019): 61–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/joll-2019-0002.

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Abstract Reading Latin. Easy as it sounds, Latin teachers know it is not. Students are able to analyze words or recognize constructions, yet this knowledge does not enable them to read and let the Latin words form images in their minds. In order to develop a reading method focusing on the visualization of the story following the Latin word order, an applied research project was set up. The research approach was that of educational design research. Based upon knowledge of word order and colometry, a reading method was developed focusing on the way the story is directed by the Roman author.
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15

BERGREN, THEODORE A. "GREEK LOAN-WORDS IN THE VULGATE NEW TESTAMENT AND THE LATIN APOSTOLIC FATHERS." Traditio 74 (2019): 1–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/tdo.2019.12.

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Early Latin Christian documents translated from Greek (e.g., Latin translations of the Greek New Testament) contain a large number of Greek loan-words. This article attempts to collect and catalogue the Greek loan-words found in the Vulgate New Testament and the early Latin versions of the Apostolic Fathers. In this literature I have identified some 420 loan-words. The purpose of this article is to systematically categorize, analyze, and comment on these loan-words. In the main section of the article the loan-words are divided into discrete content groups based on their origin and/or meaning.
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Baghdasaryan, Susanna. "Etymology and Word Decoding." Armenian Folia Anglistika 5, no. 1-2 (6) (2009): 167–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.46991/afa/2009.5.1-2.167.

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The language vocabulary is a system which grows mostly due to word formation. The latter takes place with the help of own or borrowed parts of words (root and suffix), which, certainly, used to be independent words. They penetrated the English vocabulary and made up new words while preserving their previous meanings. Most of the Latin and Greek borrowings do not make up the active vocabulary. They usually refer to scientific terms.
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Pagliarulo, Giuseppe. "On the Etymology of Gothic Alew." Journal of Germanic Linguistics 31, no. 2 (2019): 201–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1470542718000132.

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Gothic alew ‘oil’ is ultimately derived from Latin oleum. Its phonological features, however, seem hardly reconcilable with those of the Latin word. This has prompted scholars to postulate that the Latin word was not borrowed directly into Gothic but rather via a third language: continental Celtic, Illyrian or Raetic. This article examines the weaknesses of these theories and proposes that the unexpected features of the Gothic item may be explained in terms of proper Gothic or Latin developments, making direct derivation of alew from oleum the most plausible and parsimonious hypothesis.
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18

Сидорук, Галина Іванівна. "Developing word-consciousness through learning Latin and Greek morphemes." Філологічні студії: Науковий вісник Криворізького державного педагогічного університету 7, no. 2 (2012): 62–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.31812/filstd.v7i2.655.

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The article consideres, analyzes and classifies Latin-Greek affixes and roots, which are the main components of morphemes of English scientific and technical terms that require memorization for successful translation and interpretation. Innovativeness of this study is in grounding the necessity for students to understand – "feel" the internal structure and semantics of terms and "construct" a word with meaningful morphological elements without need to "learn by heart" lexical units unclear for them.
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19

Mare, María. "Issues on word formation. The case of Latin circum." Linguistic Review 35, no. 1 (2018): 121–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/tlr-2017-0019.

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Abstract This paper focuses on the characteristics of circum’s prefixation in Latin taking into account the properties of this item in different syntactic contexts and its combination with transitive and intransitive base verbs. The analysis follows a non-lexicalist framework −Distributed Morphology (Halle, Morris & Alec Marantz. 1993. Distributed morphology and the pieces of inflection. In K. Hale & S. Keyser (eds.), The view from building 20, 111–176. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press), specifically Acedo-Matellán’s (Acedo-Matellán, Víctor. 2016. The morphosyntax of transitions. A case study
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20

Russell, Katharine. "Read Like a Roman: Teaching Students to Read in Latin Word Order." Journal of Classics Teaching 19, no. 37 (2018): 17–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s205863101800003x.

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For countless students of Latin (myself included), prevailing memories of Latin instruction involve being taught to unpick Latin sentences by racing towards the verb and securing the meaning of the main clause before piecing together the rest. However, this ‘hunt the verb’ approach, where one's eyes are jumping back and forth in search of the resolution of ambiguity, is not necessarily conducive to fluent reading of Latin (Hoyos, 1993). If, as so many textbooks and teachers vouch, we are aiming to unlock Roman authors for all students to read, then we need to furnish them with the skills to be
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21

Whitton, Christopher. "Latin Literature." Greece and Rome 65, no. 2 (2018): 247–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0017383518000177.

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‘Statius’Thebaid’, someone donnishly quipped, ‘has no sufficient reason to exist.’ Kyle Gervais might beg to differ. Like theThebaiditself, his commentary on Book 2 has grown over many years, and deserves to be taken very seriously. The crisp introduction sets the tone and clearly signals priorities in its four sections, a rising tetracolon for author, problems of editing, intratexts, and intertexts; not a word on style and prosody, and reception is excluded on the ground that Statius’ ownimitatiois quite enough to be getting on with. The text is newly constituted, with ample apparatus and tex
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22

Weinberg, Bella Hass. "Index structures in early Hebrew Biblical word lists." Indexer: The International Journal of Indexing: Volume 22, Issue 4 22, no. 4 (2001): 178–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/indexer.2001.22.4.5.

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The earliest Hebrew Masoretic Bibles and word lists are analyzed from the perspective of index structure. Masoretic Bibles and word lists may have served as models for the first complete Biblical concordances, which were produced in France, in the Latin language, in the 13th century. The thematic Hebrew Biblical word lists compiled by the Masoretes several centuries earlier contain concordance-like structures - words arranged alphabetically, juxtaposed with the Biblical phrases in which they occur. The Hebrew lists lack numeric locators, but the locations of the phrases in the Bible would have
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23

Pino, Rodney, Renier Mendoza, and Rachelle Sambayan. "A Baybayin word recognition system." PeerJ Computer Science 7 (June 16, 2021): e596. http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj-cs.596.

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Baybayin is a pre-Hispanic Philippine writing system used in Luzon island. With the effort in reintroducing the script, in 2018, the Committee on Basic Education and Culture of the Philippine Congress approved House Bill 1022 or the ”National Writing System Act,” which declares the Baybayin script as the Philippines’ national writing system. Since then, Baybayin OCR has become a field of research interest. Numerous works have proposed different techniques in recognizing Baybayin scripts. However, all those studies anchored on the classification and recognition at the character level. In this w
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24

Et al., G. Indrawan. "A Method for the Affixed Word Transliteration to the Balinese Script on the Learning Web Application." Turkish Journal of Computer and Mathematics Education (TURCOMAT) 12, no. 6 (2021): 2849–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.17762/turcomat.v12i6.5792.

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This research proposed a method for the affixed word transliteration to the Balinese Script since there has not been studied yet and it is important since the affixed word needs to be transliterated, inevitably. This research is one of the efforts to preserve digitally the endangered Balinese local language knowledge in Indonesia through the multi-discipline collaboration between Computer Science and Language discipline. The proposed method was taken care of two related aspects, i.e.; (1) A Latin root word has its related Balinese Script root word by using default or special transliteration ru
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25

Gaspar, Catarina. "Orthography as Described in Latin Grammars and Spelling in Latin Epigraphic Texts." Acta Classica Universitatis Scientiarum Debreceniensis 56 (September 1, 2020): 61–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.22315/acd/2020/4.

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This paper examines writing and orthography in the work of Latin grammarians and spelling variants in epigraphic texts. It focuses on the uses of the letter H and the spelling of the word sepulchrum. The word’s spelling seems to be connected to the spelling of other words through the adjective pulcher, pulchra, pulchrum. The analysis indicates that the teaching and learning of orthography had a limited influence on epigraphic texts, but there is evidence of the consistently high frequency of the spelling sepulcrum. The paper also shows how data on Latin orthography can help in understanding th
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26

Burdy, Philipp. "On the importance of leader words in word formation: The popular transmission of the Latin abstract-forming suffix -ioin French." Word Structure 12, no. 1 (2019): 42–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/word.2019.0138.

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In this article, we trace the origin and development of the French abstract-forming suffix -aison and its collateral forms. Based on derivational inventories for Latin and French, we analyse formal and historical aspects of this suffix group as well as its semantics and its productivity throughout the centuries. Special attention will be devoted to methodological questions concerning the investigation of suffix transmission from Latin to Romance.
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WILLIAMS, D. J. "Some words used in scale insect names (Hemiptera: Sternorrhyncha: Coccoidea)." Zootaxa 3087, no. 1 (2011): 66. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3087.1.3.

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In the Introduction to the present International Code of Zoological Nomenclature (International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature, 1999) (herein referred to as the Code), there is a remark that few zoologists today or in the future can have any knowledge of the Latin language although there is adherence to Latin grammar in the Code. The present Code, nevertheless, retains the requirement that Latin or latinized adjectival species-group names must always agree in gender with the generic name with which they are combined. Furthermore, Article 30 of the Code states that a genus-group name tak
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Karbovnik, I. V. "Latin clinical veterinary terminology: word-formation, lexical-semantic and syntactic aspects." Scientific Messenger of LNU of Veterinary Medicine and Biotechnologies 20, no. 86 (2018): 161–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.15421/nvlvet8631.

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The article is devoted to the research of the Latin medical-veterinary clinical terminology system – one of the subsystems of general medical-veterinary terminology. The ways of formation of the Latin Sublanguage of clinical veterinary medicine are analyzed, sources of its replenishment are determined; It was discovered that most of the terms are composed using terms of Greek-Latin origin, which is a decisive trend in the development of the terminology of veterinary medicine and in our time.It is investigated that for the modern terminological word formation of clinical veterinary vocabulary a
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29

Kwapisz, Jan. "An Odd Latin Word and the Date ofanon.155 FGE." Trends in Classics 12, no. 2 (2020): 359–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/tc-2020-0021.

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AbstractThis note argues, against a recent article published in this journal, that the traditional Hellenistic dates of anon. 155 FGE, an experimental anonymous epigram composed of eccentric compounds, and accordingly of Hegesander of Delphi, who is Athenaeus’ source for this epigram, are correct, since an allusion to this poem is found in the early Roman poet Laevius. Anon. 155 FGE is an attack not on Cynics, but philosophers in general.
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30

Tweedie, Fiona J., and Bernard D. Frischer. "Analysis of Classical Greek and Latin Compositional Word-Order Data." Journal of Quantitative Linguistics 6, no. 1 (1999): 85–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1076/jqul.6.1.85.4146.

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31

Lu, Shijian, and Chew Lim Tan. "Retrieval of machine-printed Latin documents through Word Shape Coding." Pattern Recognition 41, no. 5 (2008): 1799–809. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.patcog.2007.10.017.

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32

Bonfante, Giuliano. "The word for amber in Baltic, Latin, Germanic, and Greek." Journal of Baltic Studies 16, no. 3 (1985): 316–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01629778500000211.

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33

Holmes, Nigel. "Interrogative Nam in Early Latin." Mnemosyne 65, no. 2 (2012): 203–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156852511x547802.

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Abstract The article examines the use of nam in close association with a question word (e.g. quisnam, nam quis) in early Latin. As Kroon (1995, 165-5) observes, the use mirrors explicative nam, in that it is found when a speaker seeks supplementary information, while explicative nam is used to provide it. If interrogative nam arose from a sarcastic use of explicative nam to comment on a dialogue partner’s failure to supply information, this could account for several nuances that commentators have found in nam questions.
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34

Babič, Matjaž. "Word order variation in Plautus." Linguistica 45, no. 1 (2005): 225–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.4312/linguistica.45.1.225-238.

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Unlike some other language phenomena, word order is an unavoidable feature of an utterance. It can be observed in any language as it is always necessary to arrange words (provided the language in question discerns such meaningful entities) in some linear order. It is, however, much more difficult to explain it, since its function can­ not be fully established in advance. Even with fairly numerous indications of its role, it would be quite bold to attempt a comprehensive analysis of word order phenomena even in Plautus, let alone in Latin as a whole.
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Ortner, Nathalie. "The word Aborigine (Given by the Latin Word Aborigine ,,from the Beginning‘‘) Generally Means Indigenous People." Journal of A Sustainable Global South 3, no. 2 (2019): 32. http://dx.doi.org/10.24843/jsgs.2019.v03.i02.p06.

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We hope you win your battle... we know what it's like to fight for your rights.“ – Carol Barker, Aborigine (2000). By dreams we mean the belief that these beings long ago started human society - they made all natural things and put them in a special place. These dreaming beings were connected with special places or ways and paths.“ – Aborigine man (2014). We're still living in pain and trauma.“ – Yalmay Yunupingu, Aborigine (2014). If we lose this bond to the country, there will be nothing left. We will be wiped out. We exist as a people through our ancestral land. That is all we are.“ – Adria
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36

CAMEROTA, MICHELE. "ISTITUZIONI E FONTI ADATTAR LA VOLGAR LINGUA AI FILOSOFICI DISCORSI. UNA INEDITA ORAZIONE DI NICCOL AGGIUNTI CONTRO ARISTOTELE E PER L'USO DELLA LINGUA ITALIANA NELLE DISSERTAZIONI SCIENTIFICHE." Nuncius 13, no. 2 (1998): 595–623. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/182539198x00563.

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Abstracttitle SUMMARY /title The manuscript Palatino 1137 in the Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale in Florence contains an unknown text of Niccolo Aggiunti, disciple of Galileo and successor of Castelli to the chair of mathematics at the university of Pisa. The document develops a strong criticism of Aristotle's undisputed authority in philosophy, and, at the same time, advocates the use of the vernacular in scientific dissertations, holding that the Italian language is a more powerful and direct means of expression than scholastic Latin. Aggiunti's linguistic arguments seem closely related to the
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37

Grotans, Anna A. "Simplifying Latin in Notker's Classroom: Tradition and Innovation." American Journal of Germanic Linguistics and Literatures 10, no. 1 (1998): 1–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1040820700002213.

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Much of the rearrangement of the Latin syntax by Notker Labeo in his classroom translation/commentaries is done according to a pedagogic principle called theordo naturalis, which prescribes an SVO word order. A theoretical discussion of theordo naturalisis preserved in a tenth-century treatise composed at St. Gall, and its practical application is found throughout Europe in the form of glosses and construe marks. My analysis shows that Notker varied the traditional and prescribed “natural order” according to the passage at hand, taking into consideration the level of textual difficulty and ped
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38

Aubert-Baillot, Sophie. "De la φρόνησις à la prudentia". Mnemosyne 68, № 1 (2015): 68–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/1568525x-12301407.

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This paper focuses on the equivalence between Greek phronesis, a very hard word to translate, and Latin prudentia. Based on the word phren, phronesis means ‘thought’, ‘intellectual perception’, ‘sense’, ‘prudence’, ‘practical wisdom’, while prudentia is derived from prouidentia, meaning ‘ability to look ahead’, ‘forecast’, ‘foresight’ and also ‘Providence’. Why, although their etymological roots were apparently different, did the Romans choose the word prudentia in order to translate Greek phronesis? And how did such a translation alter the evolution of the philosophical concept of prudence in
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39

Boyko, Alexey Nikolaevich, Elena Evgenevna Kabanova, Tatiana Anatolyevna Evstratova, Elena Vladimirovna Litvinova, and Veronika Andreevna Danilova. "Key indicators and issues of the development of culture and leisure in Moscow." LAPLAGE EM REVISTA 7, Extra-D (2021): 506–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.24115/s2446-622020217extra-d1131p.506-516.

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The concept of culture exists in almost all languages and is used in a wide range of situations, with a huge number of meanings in different areas of human activity. In its original sense, the word "culture" has never referred to any particular object, condition, or content. The notion of culture first appears in Latin. Poets and scholars of Ancient Rome have used it in their treatises and letters to mean "to cultivate" something or "cultivate" it to improve it. In ancient Greece, a close relative of the term culture has been paideia, which refers to "internal culture" or, in other words, the
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40

Koo, Bon young. ""Examination of Word Shape Effect by Adjusting the Strength of the Word Shape Determinants of Latin Characters"." Journal of Basic Design & Art 19, no. 4 (2018): 29–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.47294/ksbda.19.4.3.

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41

Alvar, Manuel. "Yakov Malkiel, Studies in the reconstruction of Hispano-Latín word families. (l. The Romance progeny of Vulgar Latin (RE)PEDARE and cognates; II. Hispano-Latin *PEDIA and *MANIA; III. The coalescence of EXPEDIRE and PETERE in lbero-Romance).-University of California Press, Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1954; 223 pp. (UCPL, vol. 11)." Nueva Revista de Filología Hispánica (NRFH) 10, no. 2 (2007): 203–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.24201/nrfh.v10i2.3320.

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Se reseñó el libro: Studies in the reconstruction of Hispano-Latín word families. (l. The Romance progeny of Vulgar Latin (RE)PEDARE and cognates; II. Hispano-Latin *PEDIA and *MANIA; III. The coalescence of EXPEDIRE and PETERE in lbero-Romance)
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Danilina, Natalia I. "COGNITIVE POTENTIAL OF VERBS OF SPEECH (on the Material of the Latin Language)." Вестник Пермского университета. Российская и зарубежная филология 12, no. 3 (2020): 15–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.17072/2073-6681-2020-3-15-23.

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Тhe article aims to identify and compare the specific cognitive potential of prototypical verbs dicere, loqui, fari in the Latin language of the classical period, to determine its origins. Objects of analysis are semantic variants of the verbs and their derivatives. The research methods include semantic, cognitive, etymological analysis. The cognitive potential of a word family is determined by the etymological semantics of the base word. In the dicere word family, the semantics of speaking is secondary and develops in interaction with the etymological meaning ‘to show’. In some of the subfami
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43

Zago, Anna. "Mytacism in Latin grammarians." Journal of Latin Linguistics 17, no. 1 (2018): 23–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/joll-2018-0002.

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Abstract This paper focuses on the different definitions of the so-called mytacism in Latin grammarians (from the early imperial period to twelth-century treatises), starting from an assessment of the textual basis of their statements. Mytacism is a vitium orationis which affects the phonetic realization of the final group vowel + [m] when followed by another vowel; mytacism also raises various phonetic and rhetorical issues such as weakening of the sound [m], nasalization of the preceding vowel, elision and hiatus. Two competing theories in modern scholarship (weak nasal consonant versus nasa
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Zudilina, Nadezhda. "Influence of the Meanings of the Greek Сoncept of “'Aret'h” on the Meanings of the Latin Concept of “Virtus” as One of the Reasons for the Polysemanticity of the Concept of “Virtual” in the XX–XXI centuries". Logos et Praxis, № 1 (червень 2019): 5–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.15688/lp.jvolsu.2019.1.1.

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The author considers how the influence of the meanings of the Greek concept “'aret'h” on the semantics of the Latin concept “virtus” could cause the concept of “virtual” acquire such meanings as “being something in essence, real” (and not formally); “actual, real”. One of the Greek words translated into Latin as “virtus” in antiquity and the Middle Ages, was the word “'aret'h”. As a result of such a translation, the meanings of the word “'aret'h” and the philosophical (first of all, Platonic) meanings of the concept of “'aret'h” enriched the meanings of the concept “virtus”. It is most likely
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Ornan, Uzzi. "Hebrew Word Structure: Its Rendering in Pointing and in Latin Conversion." Hebrew Studies 49, no. 1 (2008): 207–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/hbr.2008.0040.

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Susanto, Ronny, Farica P. Putri, and Y. Widya Wiratama. "Skew detection based on vertical projection in latin character recognition of text document image." International Journal of Engineering & Technology 7, no. 4.44 (2018): 198. http://dx.doi.org/10.14419/ijet.v7i4.44.26983.

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The accuracy of Optical Character Recognition is deeply affected by the skew of the image. Skew detection & correction is one of the steps in OCR preprocessing to detect and correct the skew of document image. This research measures the effect of Combined Vertical Projection skew detection method to the accuracy of OCR. Accuracy of OCR is measured in Character Error Rate, Word Error Rate, and Word Error Rate (Order Independent). This research also measures the computational time needed in Combined Vertical Projection with different iteration. The experiment of Combined Vertical Projection
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Cuzzolin, Pierluigi. "Negative adjectival morphology in Latin." Journal of Latin Linguistics 20, no. 1 (2021): 53–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/joll-2021-2020.

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Abstract In the present paper the evaluation of a new etymology for the word uirgō ‘virgin’ serves as occasion for an overview of the morphological prefixes by means of which Latin encodes negation on adjectives and nouns. Using the theoretical framework, whose origin ultimately goes back to Aristotle, three varieties of negation will be described: contrariety, contradiction, and privation. As will be shown, all these varieties, and privation in particular, require some theoretical refinement: in some cases, instead of contrariety, some more adequate conceptualizations are preferable such as n
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Khakimova, Giulnara. "To the question on the efficiency of Greek-Latin terminological elements within the German veterinary system of terms." Филология: научные исследования, no. 3 (March 2020): 1–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.7256/2454-0749.2020.3.32617.

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The subject of this research is the auxiliary terminological elements of Greek-Latin origin, determined by the author at the current state of study from the German one-word veterinary terms. The article considers the problem of word creation within the veterinary terminological system of German language using the terminological material of classical languages. The goal consists in identification of the most efficient morphological ways of word creation based on affixation, derivational activity of auxiliary Greek-Latin terminological elements in creation of derivative veterinary terms in Germa
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Bakhouche, Béatrice. "Les expressions de l’essence dans la traduction et le commentaire du Timée par Calcidius (IVe siècle)." Chôra 18 (2020): 103–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.5840/chora2020/202118/196.

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Expressing ‘essence’ in the translation and commentary of Timaeus by Calcidius (4th c. p.D.) depends on Platonist terminology which is not completely stabilised. We will see how, in his translation, Calcidius translated Greek words as οὐσία or φύσις, but also how he used the word substantia whereas there was no expression of essence in the Greek text. The Latin commentator used both essentia and substantia, but the latter quite often. However, in doing so, he weakened the meaning of the word substantia. Lastly, Calcidius translated into Latin and used Greek no‑Platonist expressions with a very
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Nosacheva, Marina, and Nataliya Danilina. "Types of Compound Word-Formation in Medical Terminology (On the Material of the German Language)." Vestnik Volgogradskogo gosudarstvennogo universiteta. Serija 2. Jazykoznanije, no. 4 (December 2019): 145–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.15688/jvolsu2.2019.4.11.

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The aim of the study is to optimize the classification of the types of the compound word-building with components of Greek and Latin origin; the research is based on the sample of 2882 substantive compound terms of the German clinical terminology. The researches apply the descriptive analytical and quantitative methods to the study. It is stated, that the words with complex morphemic structures can be formed by composite and non-composite types of word-building. The paper presents the complex classification of different ways of the compound word-formation considering following criteria: the ty
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