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What did Greek speakers in the Roman empire do when they wanted to learn Latin? They used Latin-learning materials containing authentic, enjoyable vignettes about daily life in the ancient world - shopping, banking, going to the baths, having fights, being scolded, making excuses - very much like the dialogues in some of today's foreign-language textbooks. These stories provide priceless insight into daily life in the Roman empire, as well as into how Latin was learned at that period, and they were all written by Romans in Latin that was designed to be easy for beginners to understand. Learners also used special beginners' versions of great Latin authors including Virgil and Cicero, and dictionaries, grammars, texts in Greek transliteration, etc. All these materials are now available for the first time to today's students, in a book designed to complement modern textbooks and enrich the Latin-learning experience. Review: Soddisfatta - Ordinato su richiesta . Arrivato.qualche giorno piรน tardi rispetto i tempi stabiti ma la cosa non ha compromesso l esito.dell'acquisto Review: Watch her YouTube talk on this work. I believe it is a great book, if this is what interests you. - This is a book that shows a large number of texts that were used to teach latin and greek to speak one of those languages to ancients who spoke the other natively. The texts generally have a latin column and either Dr Dickey's English translation, or in some cases just a Greek column, or all three. It is surprising how many of these school texts survived from antiquity. I find it to be an important record of life in the Roman Empire as well as a nice adjunct to my study of latin and greek, but as these texts were designed to help people who lived 2000 years ago, one should not expect them to be 100% directed toward modern students. Dr Dickey's discussion of each text is illuminating and fun to read. And although the book is a bit pricey, I feel that it is worth it, if your goal is to learn how languages were taught 2000 years ago. If you aren't sure what this is all about, you can search Eleanor Dickey on YouTube and you'll at least one talk that isn't related to this book, as well as a 1 hrs or so talk that is about the work in this book. I was sold after listening to that talk and have not been let down in any way. If you are looking for a book that will teach you latin using some of the insights from these ancient manuscripts, I would recommend that you pre-order her upcoming book that is actually going to be a latin textbook with lots of nice features, like dialogs, readings, grammar discussions, vocabularies, etc
| Best Sellers Rank | #842,101 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #633 in Rome #3,895 in Linguistics (Books) #7,405 in European History (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 114 Reviews |
E**A
Soddisfatta
Ordinato su richiesta . Arrivato.qualche giorno piรน tardi rispetto i tempi stabiti ma la cosa non ha compromesso l esito.dell'acquisto
A**R
Watch her YouTube talk on this work. I believe it is a great book, if this is what interests you.
This is a book that shows a large number of texts that were used to teach latin and greek to speak one of those languages to ancients who spoke the other natively. The texts generally have a latin column and either Dr Dickey's English translation, or in some cases just a Greek column, or all three. It is surprising how many of these school texts survived from antiquity. I find it to be an important record of life in the Roman Empire as well as a nice adjunct to my study of latin and greek, but as these texts were designed to help people who lived 2000 years ago, one should not expect them to be 100% directed toward modern students. Dr Dickey's discussion of each text is illuminating and fun to read. And although the book is a bit pricey, I feel that it is worth it, if your goal is to learn how languages were taught 2000 years ago. If you aren't sure what this is all about, you can search Eleanor Dickey on YouTube and you'll at least one talk that isn't related to this book, as well as a 1 hrs or so talk that is about the work in this book. I was sold after listening to that talk and have not been let down in any way. If you are looking for a book that will teach you latin using some of the insights from these ancient manuscripts, I would recommend that you pre-order her upcoming book that is actually going to be a latin textbook with lots of nice features, like dialogs, readings, grammar discussions, vocabularies, etc
A**R
Good for those wishing to speak Latin
The book has a little of everything. One thing I really liked was that the first 50 pages (pp. 10-60) had lots of everyday words like esurio - I am hungry. Now these words are in dictionaries and no doubt in phrase books, but the nice thing is that one does not have to worry about authenticity, i.e. whether the phrases are some modern writer's own simple translation or something extracted from surviving texts. The Latin grammar in these phrases is also of a lower level, which means that students who have not finished grammar can read and use them. The later examples of Latin in the book, while more advanced, are also less strenuous examples and could still be used easily for teaching. (As opposed to the Asterix series where gerunds, gerundives, and other advanced forms are freely found throughout the text. I love reading Asterix, but it does take a bit of work to reach that level of grammar.) Each Latin text is accompanied by explanations of the language, the content, and/or the context. Thus even someone who's Latin was too weak to read the passages could enjoy reading just the commentary if they were were interested in everyday Roman life. In conclusion, this is a good book for someone who wants to learn how to speak Latin and to better understand daily life. But for those who have their hearts set on reading the classics like Cicero and Horace, the level of the Latin is going to be too low and the explanations will probably not enhance the reading of such authors.
B**D
This book is absolutely fascination. Not only does it ...
This book is absolutely fascination. Not only does it show how educated Romans spoke, but it also say a lot about what they talked about. So many topics are covered, and so many fascinating details of everyday life are revealed. Each conversation is is given a thorough introduction, so each conversation is fully commented on. The original works contained in the medieval manuscripts from which these dialogues are extracted go back to the first and second centuries. A rare look at authentic, every-day conversational Latin.
T**R
Ware gekauft. Kein Zugang.
Kann das bezahlte Produkt nicht lesen. Bin sauer.
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