Hey Prof Dave, Have you ever considered a series about where we got the Bible? Who wrote it, when, why, who the audience was for each book, etc? Useful Charts did a really good series on the topic but I'd love to see you present the scholarly academic consensus on this question , if such a topic is something you'd like to explore. I think the first step to setting aside dogmas is to demystify the Bible and remind folks it's just a collection of texts written at different times for different reasons. It's not some magic book gifted from the heavens. Learning where it actually came from can help put the mystery to bed. Either way, thanks for your work. Take care!
Yes! And do a special eith dr james please, that man is entertainment on his own, professionals study comedy and cant even come close to that epic train rekt
Thank you Dave for these videos, they encourage me to study Latin ... My native language is Tamazight (aka Berber), we have some words I think are borrowed from Latin : Afullus (Pullus), Asnus (Asinus), Tifirst (t - t is for the feminine form, the root is - Firs - , which is like Pirus ).
4:30. It is easier to remember that in all declensions, thus in the A declension (1st declension) too, physical (sex) and grammatical gender coincide in every noun denoting persons, deities, jobs, professions, kinship etc. Thus, professions and offices typically performed back then by men, blood relations concerning men etc. are denoted by masculine nouns (A declension: nauta, poeta, agricola, athleta etc. O declension: legatus; 3rd declension: pater, socer, miles, eques, orator, centurion, augur, imperator etc.); most such nouns of the A declension in -ta are of Greek origin (ποιητής, ναύτης, ἀθλητής etc.). The same rule for gender holds true also for proper names of men: Catilina, Scaevola, Sulla, Murena, Maecena, Agrippa etc ; Cicero, Scipio Hannibal etc.; of deities and heroes: Ju(p)piter, Hercules, Diomedes etc ), which are of course masculine in grammatical gender. But Minerva, Porcia, Iulia, Marcella, Tertia, Musa, Nymphe, Andromeda or Andromede, Minerva, Diana, Iuno, mater, filia, anus, soror, uxor etc. are obviously feminine. This rule regarding the relation or sex to grammatical gender, among others like names of fruits, trees and plants, rivers etc. must be memorised early on.
I find it interesting that people do not know that when they see 'O Lord' in religious ...stuff, that they do not realize that it is the old vocative. Irish still retains the form with 'a'
Hey Prof Dave,
Have you ever considered a series about where we got the Bible? Who wrote it, when, why, who the audience was for each book, etc?
Useful Charts did a really good series on the topic but I'd love to see you present the scholarly academic consensus on this question , if such a topic is something you'd like to explore. I think the first step to setting aside dogmas is to demystify the Bible and remind folks it's just a collection of texts written at different times for different reasons. It's not some magic book gifted from the heavens. Learning where it actually came from can help put the mystery to bed.
Either way, thanks for your work. Take care!
Yes! And do a special eith dr james please, that man is entertainment on his own, professionals study comedy and cant even come close to that epic train rekt
The Bible is 1,000% percent accurate and real. It’s absolute truth. May God reveal that to you.
Even Christian scholars disagree @@RegineBrady
Bringing back memories of my Latin GCSE last year :(
But why when it’s such an old language
Takes me back >50 years. Thanks!
Thank you Dave for these videos, they encourage me to study Latin ... My native language is Tamazight (aka Berber), we have some words I think are borrowed from Latin : Afullus (Pullus), Asnus (Asinus), Tifirst (t - t is for the feminine form, the root is - Firs - , which is like Pirus ).
The vocative in English is normally spelled just O, not Oh, cf. "O Canada. "
The diphthong "ae" must not be pronounced as it is written, but as [ai], ie. like in "bye bye" or in "eye" and "try".
Apparently that's not the case, or is a later more colloquial pronunciation or something.
Yay latin video again
4:30. It is easier to remember that in all declensions, thus in the A declension (1st declension) too, physical (sex) and grammatical gender coincide in every noun denoting persons, deities, jobs, professions, kinship etc. Thus, professions and offices typically performed back then by men, blood relations concerning men etc. are denoted by masculine nouns (A declension: nauta, poeta, agricola, athleta etc. O declension: legatus; 3rd declension: pater, socer, miles, eques, orator, centurion, augur, imperator etc.); most such nouns of the A declension in -ta are of Greek origin (ποιητής, ναύτης, ἀθλητής etc.). The same rule for gender holds true also for proper names of men: Catilina, Scaevola, Sulla, Murena, Maecena, Agrippa etc ; Cicero, Scipio Hannibal etc.; of deities and heroes: Ju(p)piter, Hercules, Diomedes etc ), which are of course masculine in grammatical gender. But Minerva, Porcia, Iulia, Marcella, Tertia, Musa, Nymphe, Andromeda or Andromede, Minerva, Diana, Iuno, mater, filia, anus, soror, uxor etc. are obviously feminine. This rule regarding the relation or sex to grammatical gender, among others like names of fruits, trees and plants, rivers etc. must be memorised early on.
Коментар на підтримку відео та каналу.
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Oh man, can you do a video like this, but with Russian cases? Please! Пожалуйста!!!
Hey so it says 30 videos but 21 videos are hidden how am i supposed to access them. I am kinda not good with these tech stuff pls help me
What happened to your Twitter Dave?
Zionist scumbags mass reported me and got it suspended
@@ProfessorDaveExplainswait so you support Palestine right?
yeah
W Dave
Now you are far right?
I find it interesting that people do not know that when they see 'O Lord' in religious ...stuff, that they do not realize that it is the old vocative. Irish still retains the form with 'a'
How would they know, or care for that matter, that it's a vocative if they never came across that term before?
Have you ever heard of a Dr. Robert Williams?
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You're missing out on a much simpler lecture by using the traditional case ordering, even more so by implying that it is somehow absolute.
I learned them Nom, Voc, Acc, Gen, Dat, Abl
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0 guys are not interested in learning this dead language.