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23 mar 2023 · Below are 20 of those insults, most of which are (just a shade) more proper than those found in “Catullus 16.” (A translation and brilliant examination of Catullus’s poem can be found here ...
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!”.
Documented obscenities occurred rarely in classical Latin literature, limited to certain types of writing such as epigrams, but they are commonly used in the graffiti written on the walls of Pompeii and Herculaneum.
9 paź 2015 · By Markie Masucci, October 9th 2015. Vescere bracis meis. — Eat my shorts. Unitam coniurati te in foro interficiant! — May conspirators assassinate you in the mall! Ascendo tuum. — Up yours. Te odeo, interface te cochleare.
10 gru 2022 · Some of the most insulting epithets in the entire ancient Greek and Latin languages specifically denote a man who allows other men to sexually penetrate him. These includes terms like κίναιδος (kínaidos), βάταλος (bátalos), εὐρύπρωκτος (eurýprōktos), and μαλακός (malakós) in Greek and cinaedus, pathicus ...
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
Check out this book ‘How to Insult, Abuse, and Insinuate in Classical Latin which quotes famous Latin authors and gives English translations.