vulgar latin

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vulgar latin

The scholar studies a text written in Vulgar Latin.

Definition

Noun: - The spoken, non-classical forms of Latin used across the Roman Empire: This term refers to the everyday, colloquial dialects of Latin spoken by common people, soldiers, and merchants, as opposed to the formal, literary Classical Latin. It is the direct ancestor of the modern Romance languages.

Usage and Examples
  • As a historical linguistic term:

    • Vulgar Latin evolved differently in various provinces of the Roman Empire.
    • Linguists study inscriptions and texts to reconstruct features of Vulgar Latin.
  • In the context of language development:

    • French, Spanish, and Italian all developed from Vulgar Latin, not from the classical form.
    • The word for "horse" in Romance languages comes from the Vulgar Latin "caballus," not the Classical Latin "equus."
Advanced Usage and Notes
  • "Vulgar" in this context does not mean "crude" in the modern sense, but rather "of the common people" (from Latin , meaning "the common people").
  • The term is used to describe the living, changing language that was the medium of everyday communication, which included regional variations and simplifications of grammar and pronunciation compared to the written standard.
Variants and Related Words
  • Late Latin: Refers to the written Latin of roughly the same period (3rd-6th centuries AD), which was influenced by Vulgar Latin.
  • Proto-Romance: A reconstructed common ancestor of the Romance languages, essentially synonymous with later stages of Vulgar Latin.
  • Romance languages: The modern languages (e.g., French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, Romanian) that descended from Vulgar Latin.
Synonyms
  • Colloquial Latin
  • Common Latin
  • Spoken Latin
Key Distinction
  • Vulgar Latin vs. Classical Latin: The primary distinction is one of register and medium. Classical Latin was the standardized literary and administrative language, preserved in texts. Vulgar Latin was the spoken language of daily life, which underwent continuous, natural change.
vulgar latin

The scholar studies a text written in Vulgar Latin.

Noun
  1. nonclassical Latin dialects spoken in the Roman Empire; source of Romance languages

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