Civilization V: How is the Latin? Latin in Video Games. Penultimate Stress Rule EXPLAINED



The Civilization game series has some characters that speak in ancient languages. How is the reconstructed pronunciation? Let’s discover that together!

#latin #civilization #augustus

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38 thoughts on “Civilization V: How is the Latin? Latin in Video Games. Penultimate Stress Rule EXPLAINED”

  1. I think you've correctly identified some accent markers but you kinda got stuck on it being a german(ic) accent. I feel like I'm hearing french aspects, too, especially with the forced aspiration of p an t sounds (almost has a glottal stop before), which come more naturally to german speakers and which they use almost exclusively when they say p or t . Also germans actually do often struggle with reduced i especially at the end (speaking as swiss, it's a key aspect that differentiates our language from german; our diminutive suffix is "-li", which makes this easy to spot).
    Great explanations, though, and amazing german parody, that's exactly how we hear standard german, too!

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  2. Ever since I found out and became aware of the aspiration of the Germanic plosives p, t and k respectively, I, a native High German speaker, have taken great pains aspirating said consonants with no fail in my speech. It feels quite adequate and brings me joy.

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  3. Hi, can you react to song Light of Rome from movie Dragonblade/Tian Jiang Xiong Shi ? Song is in Latin i gues..Movie is about Romans on China…..not very great movie, but have much about Rome, etc 🙂 Greeting From Poland 🙂

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  4. Cool video! Love the Civ games. You should, someday, do a video about today's romance laguanges and how much they differ from, let's say Augustus-era Latin. I am a native Spanish speaker and that would be interesting. (Don't forget Romanian xD )

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  5. The obvious game to look at the Latin in is Fallout: New Vegas. There's not a lot of spoken Latin, but Classical vs. Ecclesiastic pronunciation is actually a plot point there to distinguish which faction someone is in.

    Beyond that, how about a video on the proper (even if they didn’t exist when classical Latin was spoken) way to pronounce common Latin terms used today like “voir dire”, “(si vis pacem,) para bellum”, “non sequitur” and “memento mori‎”?

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  6. The voice of Augustus was provided by Émile Khordoc. What little I could find about him, he is apparently a linguistics professor who speaks both Latin and Ancient Greek as well as English and French and who lives in Canada.

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  7. Terrific video, Luke. Quick question. In your opinion, given that peninsular Spanish uses the retracted "S," has the "W" sound in words like "huevo" and "huesped" and is devoid of any "V" sound as you point out… would it be fair to say that peninsular Spanish is the romance language that 'sounds' closest to Ancient Latin? (this is, of course, leaving out sounds like "Th" that it shares with Greek and English and the guttural "J"). Thanks!

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