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Showerthoughts_Mod t1_iuhkmob wrote

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luxtabula t1_iuhkxlw wrote

Big no on this one. Most of the loanwords are used for academic or industrial reasons, not for common conversation. They also have equivalent English words that get the point across better. English still is a Germanic language in every aspect and Latin is a huge curve.

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zahhax t1_iuhkyad wrote

I found Latin really easy to learn, especially since I know Spanish too

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LOL_Murica t1_iuhlrto wrote

Other way around. I took one year of Latin in high school and it made learning French, Spanish and German a thousand times easier.

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ComplexMoth t1_iuhly0e wrote

As a native Spanish speaker, absolutely not. It's apalling how most English speaking people find words with a latin root weird, difficult to pronounce and just magically difficult to understand and write. Go figure

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AxialGem t1_iuhmw3o wrote

Well, you're presumably an English speaker. Go find literally any Latin literature and find out...

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EvenSpoonier t1_iuho9lv wrote

Ecce! In pictura est puella, nomine Cornelia. Cornelia est puella Romana quae in Italia habitat...

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Banana-Louigi t1_iuht5ry wrote

Holder of a degree in linguistics and speaker (ranging from intermediate to very poor) of two romantic and two Germanic languages and I 100% concur.

Latin is a dead language, dead as dead could be. It's killed off all the Romans and now it's killing me!

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luxtabula t1_iuhtiot wrote

Because English is not a Latin based language and most of the words and the way they're conjugated simply don't match up with standard English. I see the same thing with Spanish, French, and Portuguese speakers struggling with some Germanic words on first try.

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bayo_sandwich t1_iuirm8s wrote

>Most of the loanwords are used for academic or industrial reasons, not for common conversation.

Even then, the loanword usually means something very different than the original Latin. Ambitio, for example. Or religio

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