Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Blogging Latin: nomen diarium cyberneticum


People for Others is celebrating its 1000th blog post, a milestone I'm anticipating sometime next year (the blog did get its 100,0000th visitor while I was away on retreat). My friend Fran wished PFO "ad multos annos!" (Latin, "to many years!") and then wondered if she could also wish "ad multos postos" -- to many more posts?

Latin isn't quite dead as a language, thanks to the Vatican's use of it for official documents and its consequent need for new words for ideas and objects ancient Rome never imagined. The Vatican maintains a list of recent Latin coinages. My favorites? Minigolf: pilamálleus minūtus and, I am not joking, hot pants: brevíssimae bracae femíneae.

Computer is on the Vatican list (
instrumentum computatórium), but neither blog nor post appears. A list of Latin computer terms (of unknown provenance, so take it with a grain of sal) offer a Latin version of www (ttt for tela totius terrae), but nothing for blog or post either.

I propose filling the gap with nomen diarium cyberneticum (an entry in a daily diary on the webs). Feel free to correct my grammar and to offer your own suggestions!



Photo is from Wikipedia.

2 comments:

  1. Oh Michelle, hah! A post about Latin that also includes my name. Now that is funny. Speaking of funny, that lexicon has no lack of festívitas!

    Thank you for this, which made me smile.

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  2. What fun... Will delight my students this summer as it appears I am teaching English once again

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