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Culture War Roundup for the week of January 15, 2024

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Nice! Note that it’s iecit rather than iacuit, and I feel like Latin wouldn’t do two coordinate clauses joined with a conjunction. Maybe a participle phrase, eg Abbotus numquam fideliter credens aleam iecit.

It’s rare in Latin, but I was going for the calque; I think ‘custodente Fidem numquam aleam iecit’ would be the proper classical phrasing stylistically.

I read "habuit fidem" more as keeping faith (as in, acting trustworthily (or so, that's not quite right)) than as believing.

Not sure what the best way to put that in Latin is, but I don't think fideliter credens works, if I'm right in interpreting it that way.

My life was much happier before I learned that Veni, Vidi, Vici could (as speculated for ancient Latin) or does (for Church Latin) sounds more like Wini, Widi, Wicky.

Just diminishes the gravitas of the whole thing doesn't it?

I'm sure many a Romaboo/Grecophile is in denial that their tasteful grey or white sculptures just had the garish paint peel off.

Imo they weren't actually garish but the people doing the reconstructions (basically just guesses based on very little physical evidence) knew they'd get more attention and iconoclast street cred by making them look awful.

In Ecclesiastical Latin, it sounds the same as it does in English (edit:or rather, I suppose I should say that the common pronunciation of that phrase among English speakers is the modern ecclesiastical Latin one). I agree that the original pronunciation is a severe let-down.

sounds more like Wini, Widi, Wicky

A rose by any other name would smell as sweet …

Vici is related to victory. And the hard c=k is manly.

c===3 is manlier.