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23 mar 2023 · Despite its reputation as a learned language of science, religion, and philosophy, ancient Latin was in fact a rough-and-ready language full of strikingly frank insults designed to cut to the...
13 sty 2015 · SWEAR WORDS & INSULTS: “Es stultior asino” – You are dumber than an a**. “Es scortum obscenus vilis” – You are a vile, perverted whore. “Te futueo et caballum tuum” – Screw you and the horse you rode in on. “Es mundus excrementi” – You are a pile of sh*t. “Es stercus!”.
Latin obscenity is the profane, indecent, or impolite vocabulary of Latin, and its uses. Words deemed obscene were described as obsc(a)ena (obscene, lewd, unfit for public use), or improba (improper, in poor taste, undignified).
Many insults are based on the Roman idea of "scelus," which roughly means "crime" in English, but scelus also has deeper connotations: a scelus is a kind of pure wickedness, an outrageous violation of the moral order. This is hard to translate into English, but the insults sure sound good in Latin: you can
Abstract. Both of the above addresses are insults, though it is not easy for modern readers to understand why. Many Latin insults are hard to understand in one way or another, and perhaps as a result the scholarly study of insults began at an earlier period than that of most address forms.
25 cze 2014 · Wikipedia has a nice selection of Latin bad words… And then there’s Barry Baldwin ‘s Classical Swearing: A Vade-Mecum , that certainly provides food for thought – and also provides English equivalents of pretty baroque Latin and Greek insults.
Many insults are based on the Roman idea of "scelus," which roughly means "crime" in English, but scelus also has deeper connotations: a scelus is a kind of pure wickedness, an outrageous violation of the moral order.