Ineffectively, they have the same meaning. I don't understand latin suffixes and the like to understand the effective differences between the words, however.
i took 3 years of it in high school. i wish now i had continued with it for my senior year and as my foreign language in college. my rudimentary french turned out to be worthless. i shoulda taken spanish.
anyway, im not much help here. i was always a slacker in that class and it's been years since i used it. though occasionally i can intuit things in my law classes from it.
i took 3 years of it in high school. i wish now i had continued with it for my senior year and as my foreign language in college. my rudimentary french turned out to be worthless. i shoulda taken spanish.
anyway, im not much help here. i was always a slacker in that class and it's been years since i used it. though occasionally i can intuit things in my law classes from it.
Comments
I didn't study Latin, I do know a lot of people who have. I could ask.
naděje umírá poslední
loqui
locutus
And their roots, loqu and locut.
Ineffectively, they have the same meaning. I don't understand latin suffixes and the like to understand the effective differences between the words, however.
http://www.informalmusic.com/latinsoc/verbs/loqu.html
anyway, im not much help here. i was always a slacker in that class and it's been years since i used it. though occasionally i can intuit things in my law classes from it.
Ah...cool. Thanks for that link -- helps a lot.
Wow...what a useless post
for you maybe. i just killed about 2 minutes in my critically boring constitutional law class though, so it was very useful for me.
Hehe...touche.
you can, it's just that no one does anymore.
naděje umírá poslední
- Antwerp '06, Nijmegen '07, Werchter '07