Bianca Liebermann, Lateinische Präpositionen: Verortung und Valenz. Studienbücher zur lateinischen Linguistik, 1. Hamburg: Helmut Buske Verlag, 2016, Pp. x, 290. ISBN 9783875487404. €26.90 (pb).
Ciao a tutti, il dizionario (clicca-e-leggi qui) DCC Latin Core Vocabulary raccoglie le 1000 parole più comuni del Latino (sul sito spiega come si sia arrivati a questa sintesi: altri presupposti avrebbero di certo portato ad altri risultati, ma il principio rimane valido). Nell'ultimo post, dizionario frequenziale latino: le 1000 parole più comuni abbiamo pubblicato una prima bozza di…
Portail de l'Académie de Paris, upload/docs/image/png/2009-10/accueil_open_office.png Ce lexique latin se présente sous la forme d'un fichier qu'on peut ouvrir, manipuler, reclasser, compléter avec Excel ou Open Office grâce à l'onglet __données__ et à la commande __trier__
tirocinii rudimenta. Around 200AD, Marcus Junianus Justinus produced an abridged or 'epitomized' version of the Philippic Histories of the Augustan historian Pompeius Trogus. In doing so, he omitted all he did not find either intrinsically interesting or of use for historical examples. Over the centuries that followed, the abridgement eclipsed the original work in popularity, to the extent that Trogus' original work vanished and only Justin's version survived. In this investigation of the language of the Epitome, the first in almost a century, J.C. Yardley examines the work to establish how much of the text belongs to Trogus, and how much to Justin. His study compares words and expressions used in the Epitome with the usage of other Roman authors, and establishes areas where diction is similar to Augustan-era Latin and less in use in Justin's time. Yardley's extensive analysis reveals that there is more of Justin in the work than is often supposed, which may have implications for the historical credibility of the document. Yardley also demonstrates how much Trogus was influenced by his contemporary Livy as well as other Roman authors such as Sallust and Caesar, and how the Epitome reveals the influence of Roman poetry, especially the work of Virgil.