186 BC
400 BC
449 BC
500 BC
550 BC
700 BC
75 BC
Ab urbe condita
Ablative
Accusative
Aedile
Ancient Roman bathing
Ancient Roman cuisine
Ancient Rome
Ancient Rome and wine
Apocope
Apuleius
Architecture of ancient Rome
Auctoritas
Augustus (honorific)
Aulus Furius Antias
Auxiliaries (Roman military)
Basil Lanneau Gildersleeve
Borders of the Roman Empire
Boustrophedon
Byzantine Empire
Caesar (title)
Campaign history of the Roman military
Carl Darling Buck
Carmen Arvale
Carmen Saliare
Castor and Pollux#Worship and interventions
Castra
Cato the Elder
Catullus
Century Assembly
Charles Edwin Bennett
Chronology
Cicero
Circus (building)
Classical Latin
Clothing in ancient Rome
Collegiality#Roman collegiality
Conflict of the Orders
Constitution of the Late Roman Empire
Constitution of the Roman Empire
Constitution of the Roman Kingdom
Constitution of the Roman Republic
Contemporary Latin
Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum
Cosmetics in Ancient Rome
Culture of ancient Rome
Curia
Curiate Assembly
Cursus honorum
Curtius Rufus
Dative
Decemviri
Declension
Decline of the Roman Empire
Deforestation during the Roman period
Diphthong
Domenico Comparetti
Dominate
Duenos Inscription
Dux
Ecclesiastical Latin
Education in Ancient Rome
Ennius
Equestrian order
Etruscan alphabet
Expressions
Extinct language
Forum (Roman)
Founding of Rome
Frederic de Forest Allen
Gaius Acilius
Gaius Julius Caesar Strabo Vopiscus
Gaius Lucilius
Gaius Sempronius Tuditanus (consul 129 BC)
Garigliano Bowl
Genitive
Gens
Gnaeus Naevius
Grammatical case
Grammatical number
Henry John Roby
Hiberno-Latin
Hippika gymnasia
History of Latin
History of Rome
History of the Latin alphabet
History of the Roman Constitution
Horace
ISO 639-1
ISO 639-2
ISO 639-3
Imperator
Imperial cult (ancient Rome)
Imperium
400 BC
449 BC
500 BC
550 BC
700 BC
75 BC
Ab urbe condita
Ablative
Accusative
Aedile
Ancient Roman bathing
Ancient Roman cuisine
Ancient Rome
Ancient Rome and wine
Apocope
Apuleius
Architecture of ancient Rome
Auctoritas
Augustus (honorific)
Aulus Furius Antias
Auxiliaries (Roman military)
Basil Lanneau Gildersleeve
Borders of the Roman Empire
Boustrophedon
Byzantine Empire
Caesar (title)
Campaign history of the Roman military
Carl Darling Buck
Carmen Arvale
Carmen Saliare
Castor and Pollux#Worship and interventions
Castra
Cato the Elder
Catullus
Century Assembly
Charles Edwin Bennett
Chronology
Cicero
Circus (building)
Classical Latin
Clothing in ancient Rome
Collegiality#Roman collegiality
Conflict of the Orders
Constitution of the Late Roman Empire
Constitution of the Roman Empire
Constitution of the Roman Kingdom
Constitution of the Roman Republic
Contemporary Latin
Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum
Cosmetics in Ancient Rome
Culture of ancient Rome
Curia
Curiate Assembly
Cursus honorum
Curtius Rufus
Dative
Decemviri
Declension
Decline of the Roman Empire
Deforestation during the Roman period
Diphthong
Domenico Comparetti
Dominate
Duenos Inscription
Dux
Ecclesiastical Latin
Education in Ancient Rome
Ennius
Equestrian order
Etruscan alphabet
Expressions
Extinct language
Forum (Roman)
Founding of Rome
Frederic de Forest Allen
Gaius Acilius
Gaius Julius Caesar Strabo Vopiscus
Gaius Lucilius
Gaius Sempronius Tuditanus (consul 129 BC)
Garigliano Bowl
Genitive
Gens
Gnaeus Naevius
Grammatical case
Grammatical number
Henry John Roby
Hiberno-Latin
Hippika gymnasia
History of Latin
History of Rome
History of the Latin alphabet
History of the Roman Constitution
Horace
ISO 639-1
ISO 639-2
ISO 639-3
Imperator
Imperial cult (ancient Rome)
Imperium
For "Old Latin" translation of the Bible, see Vetus Latina.
Old Latin
Prisca Latinitas
Titus Maccius Plautus, an Old Latin writer
Spoken in
Roman Republic
Region
Italy
Language extinction
Developed into Classical Latin in 1st century BC
Language family
Indo-European
Italic
Latino-Faliscan
Latin
Old Latin
Official status
Official language in
Rome
Regulated by
Schools of grammar and rhetoric
Language codes
ISO 639-1
la
ISO 639-2
lat
ISO 639-3
lat
Expansion of the Roman Republic, 2nd century BC. It is unlikely Latin was spoken much beyond the green area, and was by no means ubiquitous within it.
Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.
Old Latin (also called Early Latin or Archaic Latin) refers to the Latin language in the period before the age of Classical Latin; that is, all Latin before 75 BC.1 The term prisca Latinitas distinguishes it in New Latin and Contemporary Latin from vetus Latina, in which "old" has another meaning.
The use of "old", "early" and "archaic" has been standard in publications of the corpus of Old Latin writings since at least the 18th century. The definition is not arbitrary but these terms refer to writings with spelling conventions and word forms not generally found in works written under the Roman Empire. This article presents some of the major differences.
Contents
1 Philological constructs
1.1 The old-time language
1.2 The four Latins of Isidore
1.3 Old Latin
2 Corpus
2.1 Fragments and inscriptions
2.2 Works of literature
3 Script
4 Orthography
5 Phonology
6 Grammar and morphology
6.1 Nouns
6.1.1 First declension (a)
6.1.2 Second declension (o)
6.1.3 Third declension (c)
6.1.4 Fourth declension (u)
6.1.5 Fifth declension (e)
6.2 Personal pronouns
6.3 Relative pronoun
6.4 Verbs
6.4.1 Old present and perfects
7 Bibliography
8 Sources
9 See also
10 External links
Philological constructs
The old-time language
The concept of Old Latin (Prisca Latinitas) is as old as the concept of Classical Latin, both dating to at least as early as the late Roman republic. In that time period Marcus Tullius Cicero, along with others, noted that the language he used every day, presumably the upper-class city Latin, included lexical items and phrases that were heirlooms from a previous time, which he called verborum vetustas prisca,2 loosely translated as "the old-time language."
During the classical period, Prisca Latinitas, Prisca Latina and other expressions using the adjective always meant these remnants of a previous language, which, in the Roman philology, was taken to be much older in fact than it really was. Viri prisci, "old-time men," were the population of Latium before the foundation of Rome.
The four Latins of Isidore
In the Late Latin period, when Classical Latin was behind them, the Latin- and Greek-speaking grammarians were faced with multiple phases, or styles, within the language. Isidore of Seville reports a classification scheme that had come into existence in or before his time: "the four Latins" ("Latinas autem linguas quatuor esse quidam dixerunt").3 They were Prisca, spoken before the founding of Rome, when Janus and Saturn ruled Latium, to which he dated the Carmina Saliorum; Latina, dated from the time of king Latinus, in which period he placed the laws of the Twelve Tables; Romana, essentially equal to Classical Latin; and Mixta, "mixed" Classical Latin and Vulgar Latin, which is known today as Late Latin. The scheme persisted with little change for some thousand years after Isidore.
Old Latin
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Vetus Latina - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The phrase Vetus Latina is Latin for Old Latin, and the Vetus Latina is sometimes known as the Old Latin Bible.[1] It was, however, written in ...
In 1874 John Wordsworth used the definition:4
By Early Latin I understand Latin of the whole period of the Republic, which is separated very strikingly, both in tone and in outward form, from that of the Empire.
Although the differences are striking and can be easily identified by Latin readers, they are not such as to cause a language barrier. Latin speakers of the empire had no reported trouble understanding old Latin, except for the few texts that must date from the time of the kings, mainly songs. Thus the laws of the twelve tables, which began the republic, were comprehensible, but the Carmen Saliare, probably written under Numa Pompilius, was not entirely.
An opinion concerning Old Latin, of a Roman man of letters in the middle Republic, does survive: the historian, Polybius,5 read "the first treaty between Rome and Carthage", which he says "dates from the consulship of Lucius Junius Brutus and Marcus Horatius, the first consuls after the expulsion of the kings." Knowledge of the early consuls is somewhat obscure, but Polybius also states that the treaty was formulated 28 years after Xerxes I crossed into Greece; that is, in 452 BC, about the time of the Decemviri, when the constitution of the Roman republic was being defined. Polybius says of the language of the treaty: "...the ancient Roman language differs so much from the modern that it can only be partially made out, and that after much application by the most intelligent men."
There is no sharp distinction between Old Latin as it was spoken for most of the republic and classical Latin, but the earlier grades into the later. The end of the republic was too late a termination for compilers after Wordsworth; Charles Edwin Bennett said:6
'Early Latin' is necessarily a somewhat vague term ... Bell, De locativi in prisca Latinitate vi et usu, Breslau, 1889,7 sets the later limit at 75 B.C. A definite date is really impossible, since archaic Latin does not terminate abruptly, but continues even down to imperial times.
Bennett's own date of 100 BC. did not prevail but rather Bell's 75 BC. became the standard as expressed in the four-volume Loeb Library and other major compendia. Over the 377 years from 452 BC to 75 BC Old Latin evolved from being partially comprehensible by classicists with study to being easily read by men of letters.
Corpus
The Forum inscription, one of the oldest known Latin inscriptions. It is written boustrophedon, albeit irregularly. From a rubbing by Domenico Comparetti.
Old Latin authored works began in the 3rd century BC. These are complete or nearly complete works under their own name surviving as manuscripts copied from other manuscripts in whatever script was current at the time. In addition are fragments of works quoted in other authors.
Numerous inscriptions placed by various methods (painting, engraving, embossing) on their original media survive just as they were except for the ravages of time. Some of these were copied from other inscriptions. No inscription can be earlier than the introduction of the Greek alphabet into Italy but none survive from that early date. The imprecision of archaeological dating makes precise dates impossible but the earliest survivals are probably from the 6th century BC. Some of the texts, however, surviving as fragments in the works of classical authors, had to have been composed earlier than the republic, in the monarchy. These are listed below.
Fragments and inscriptions
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Old Latin Version (International Standard Bible Encyclopedia)
Article on Latin versions of the Bible that preceded Jerome's Vulgate
Notable Old Latin fragments with estimated dates include:
The Carmen Saliare (chant put forward in classical times as having been sung by the salian brotherhood formed by Numa Pompilius, approximate date 700 BC)
The Praeneste fibula (7th century BC, but of authenticity questioned by some experts)
The Forum inscription (illustration, right c. 550 BC under the monarchy)
The Duenos inscription (c. 500 BC)
The Castor-Pollux dedication (c. 500 BC)
The Garigliano Bowl (c. 500 BC)
The Lapis Satricanus (early 5th century BC)
The preserved fragments of the laws of the Twelve Tables (traditionally, 449 BC, attested much later)
The Tibur pedestal (c. 400 BC)
The Scipionum Elogia
Epitaph of Lucius Cornelius Scipio Barbatus (c. 280 BC)
Epitaph of Lucius Cornelius Scipio (consul 259 BC)
Epitaph of Publius Cornelius Scipio P.f. P.n. Africanus (died about 270 BC)
The Senatus consultum de Bacchanalibus (186 BC)
The Vase Inscription from Ardea
The Corcolle Altar fragments
The Carmen Arvale
Altar to the Unknown Divinity (92 BC)
Works of literature
Cato the Elder and his wife
The authors are as follows:
Lucius Livius Andronicus (c. 280/260 BC — c. 200 BC), translator, founder of Roman drama
Gnaeus Naevius (ca. 264 — 201 BC), dramatist, epic poet
Titus Maccius Plautus (c. 254 — 184 BC), dramatist, composer of comedies
Quintus Ennius (239 BC — c. 169 BC), poet
Marcus Pacuvius (ca. 220 BC — 130 BC), tragic dramatist, poet
Statius Caecilius (220 BC — 168/166 BC), comic dramatist
Publius Terentius Afer (195/185 BC — 159 BC), comic dramatist
Quintus Fabius Pictor (3rd century BC), historian
Lucius Cincius Alimentus (3rd century BC), military historian
Marcius Porcius Cato (234 BC — 149 BC), generalist, topical writer
Gaius Acilius (2nd century BC), historian
Lucius Accius (170 BC — c. 86 BC), tragic dramatist, philologist
Gaius Lucilius (c. 160's BC — 103/2 BC), satirist
Quintus Lutatius Catulus (2nd century BC), public officer, epigramatist
Aulus Furius Antias (2nd century BC), poet
Gaius Julius Caesar Strabo Vopiscus (130 BC — 87 BC), public officer, tragic dramatist
Lucius Pomponius Bononiensis (2nd century BC), comic dramatist, satirist
Lucius Cassius Hemina (2nd century BC), historian
Lucius Calpurnius Piso Frugi (2nd century BC), historian
Manius Manilius (2nd century BC), public officer, jurist
Lucius Coelius Antipater (2nd century BC), jurist, historian
Publius Sempronius Asellio (158 BC — after 91 BC), military officer, historian
Gaius Sempronius Tuditanus (2nd century BC), jurist
Lucius Afranius (2nd & 1st centuries BC), comic dramatist
Titus Albucius (2nd & 1st centuries BC), orator
Publius Rutilius Rufus (158 BC — after 78 BC), jurist
Quintus Lutatius Catulus (2nd & 1st centuries BC), public officer, poet
Lucius Aelius Stilo Praeconinus (154 BC — 74 BC), philologist
Quintus Claudius Quadrigarius (2nd & 1st centuries BC), historian
Valerius Antias (2nd & 1st centuries BC), historian
Lucius Cornelius Sisenna (121 BC — 67 BC), soldier, historian
Quintus Cornificius (2nd & 1st centuries BC), rhetorician
Script
Main articles: History of the Latin alphabet, Latin alphabet, and Old Italic alphabet
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Old Latin
Old Latin on WN Network delivers the latest Videos and Editable pages for News & Events, including Entertainment, Music, Sports, Science and more, Sign ...
Old Latin surviving in inscriptions is written in various forms of the Etruscan alphabet as it evolved into the Latin alphabet. The writing conventions varied by time and place until classical conventions prevailed. The works of authors in manuscript form were copied over into the scripts of other times. The original writing does not exist.
Orthography
Some differences between old and classical Latin were of spelling only; pronunciation is thought to be essentially as in classical Latin:8
Single for double consonants: Marcelus for Marcellus
Double vowels for long vowels: aara for āra
q for c before u: pequnia for pecunia
gs/ks/xs for x: e.g. regs for rex, saxsum for saxum
c for g: Caius for Gaius
These differences did not necessarily run concurrently with each other and were not universal; that is, c was used for both c and g.
Phonology
Diphthong changes from Old Latin (left) to Classical Latin (right)9
Phonological characteristics of older Latin are the case endings -os and -om (later Latin -us and -um), as well as the existence of diphthongs such as oi and ei (later Latin ū or oe, and ī). In many locations, classical Latin turned intervocalic /s/ into /r/, which is called rhotacism. This rhotacism had implications for declension: early classical Latin, honos, honoris (from honos, honoses); later Classical (by analogy) honor, honoris ("honor"). Some Old Latin texts preserve /s/ in this position, such as the Carmen Arvale's lases for lares.
Grammar and morphology
Nouns
Latin nouns are distinguished by grammatical case, a word with a termination, or suffix, determining its use in the sentence, such as subject, predicate, etc. A case for a given word is formed by suffixing a case ending to a part of the word common to all its cases called a stem. Stems are classified by their last letters as vowel or consonant. Vowel stems are formed by adding a suffix to a shorter and more ancient segment called a root. Consonant stems are the root (roots end in consonants). The combination of the last letter of the stem and the case ending often results in an ending also called a case ending or termination. For example, the stem puella- receives a case ending -m to form the accusative case puellam in which the termination -am is evident.10
In Classical Latin textbooks the declensions are named from the letter ending the stem or First, Second, etc. through Fifth. A declension may be illustrated by a paradigm, or listing of all the cases of a typical word. This method is less frequently applied to Old Latin, and with less validity. In contrast to Classical Latin, Old Latin reflects the evolution of the language from an unknown hypothetical ancestor spoken in Latium. The endings are multiple. Their use depends on time and locality. Any paradigm selected would be subject to these constraints and if applied to the language universally would result in false constructs, hypothetical words not attested in the Old Latin corpus. Nevertheless the endings are illustrated below by quasi-classical paradigms. Alternate endings from different stages of development are given, but they may not be attested for the word of the paradigm. For example, in the Second Declension, there was never a *campoe, "fields", but there was a poploe, "people."
First declension (a)
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Vetus Latina - Resources for the Old Latin Bible
Vetus Latina - Resources for the Study of the Old Latin Bible. Includes the Vulgate, Church Fathers, the Verbum Project, Articles and gateways of links
The 'A-Stem Declension'. The stems of nouns of this declension usually end in –ā and are typically feminine.11
A nominative case ending of –s in a few masculines indicates the nominative singular case ending may have been originally –s: paricidas for later paricida, but the –s tended to get lost.12 In the nominative plural, -ī replaced original -s as in the genitive singular.13
puellā, –āī
girl, maiden f.
Singular
Plural
Nominative
puellā
puellāī
Genitive
puell-ās/-āī/-ais
puell-om/-āsōm
Dative
puellāi
puell-eis/-abos
Accusative
puellam
puellās
Ablative
puellād
puell-eis/-abos
Vocative
puella
puellai
Locative
Romai
Syracuseis
In the genitive singular, the –s was replaced with –ī from the second declension, the resulting diphthong shortening to –ai subsequently becoming –ae.14 In a few cases the replacement did not take place: pater familiās. Explanations of the late inscriptional -aes are speculative. In the genitive plural, the regular ending is –āsōm (classical –ārum by rhotacism and shortening of final o) but some nouns borrow –om (classical –um) from the second declension.13
In the dative singular the final i is either long15 or short.16 The ending becomes –ae, –a (Feronia) or –e (Fortune).15
In the accusative singular, Latin regularly shortens a vowel before final m.16
In the ablative singular, –d was regularly lost after a long vowel.16 In the dative and ablative plural, the –abos descending from Indo-European *–ābhos17 is used for feminines only (deabus). *–ais > –eis > īs is adapted from –ois of the o-declension.18
In the vocative singular, an original short a merged with the shortened a of the nominative.16
The locative case would not apply to such a meaning as puella, so Roma, which is singular, and Syracusae, which is plural, have been substituted. The locative plural has already merged with the –eis form of the ablative.
Second declension (o)
The 'O-Stem Declension'. The stems of the nouns of the o-declension end in ŏ deriving from the o-grade of Indo-European ablaut.19 Classical Latin evidences the development ŏ > ŭ. Nouns of this declension are either masculine or neuter.
Nominative singulars ending in -ros or -ris syncopate the -os:20 ager not ageros. The nominative plural masculine follows two lines of development, each leaving a trail of endings. Roman generalizes the Indo-European pronominal ending *-oi. The sequence is *-oi>-oe>-ei>-e>-ī21 The "provincial texts" generalize from the Indo-European nominative plural ending *-ōs appearing in the Third Declension:21 *-ōs >-ēs, -eis, -īs,22 from 190 BC on.23
campos, –ī
field, plain m.
saxom, –ā
rock, stone n.
Singular
Plural
Singular
Plural
Nominative
campos
camp-oe/-e/-ei/-ī
/-ēs/-eis/-īs
saxom
sax-ā/-ă
Genitive
camp-ī/-ei
camp-ōm/-ūm
saxī
sax-ōm/-ūm
Dative
campō
camp-ois/-oes/-eis/-īs
saxō
sax-ois/-oes/-eis/-īs
Accusative
campom
campōs
saxom
sax-ā/-ă
Ablative
campōd
camp-ois/-oes/-eis/-īs
saxōd
sax-ois/-oes/-eis/-īs
Vocative
camp-e/-us
camp-oe/-e/-ei/-ī
/-ēs/-eis/-īs
saxom
saxǎ
Locative
campī/-ei/-oi
camp-ois/-oes/-eis/-īs
saxī/-ei/-oi
sax-ois/-oes/-eis/-īs
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OLD LATIN & GOTHIC VERSIONS
Versions such as the Syriac Peshitta and Old Latin are misrepresented by KJV-Only advocates as being the earliest bibles "based on the Traditional text. ...
In the genitive singular, –ī is earliest, alternating later with –ei: populi Romanei, "of the Roman people."24 In the genitive plural, -om and -um (or -ōm and -ūm22) from Indo-European *-ōm survived in classical Latin "words for coins and measures";25 otherwise classical has -ōrum by analogy with 1st declension -ārum.
In the dative singular, if the Praenestine Fibula is a fraud, Numasioi, the only instance of –ōi, does not count and the Old Latin ending must be –ō.
In the vocative singular, some nouns lose the –e, (0 ending) but not necessarily the same as in classical Latin.26 The -e alternates regularly with -us.27 The vocative plural was the same as the nominative plural.28 Except for some singular forms that were like the genitive, the locative was captured by the ablative case in all Italic languages prior to Old Latin.29
Third declension (c)
The Consonant Declension. This declension contains nouns that are masculine, feminine, and neuter. The stem ends in the root consonant, except in the special case where it ends in -i (i-stem declension). The i-stem, which is a vowel-stem, partially fused with the consonant-stem in the pre-Latin period and went further in Old Latin.30 I/y and u/w can be treated either as consonants or as vowels; hence their classification as semi-vowels. Mixed-stem declensions are partly like consonant-stem and partly like i-stem. Consonant-stem declensions vary slightly depending on which consonant is root-final: stop-, r-, n-, s-, etc.31 The paradigms below include a stop-stem (reg-) and an i-stem (igni-).
Rēgs –ēs
king m.
Ignis -ēs
fire m.
Singular
Plural
Singular
Plural
Nominative
rēg/-s
rēg-eīs/-īs/-ēs/-ĕs
ign-is/-es
ign-eīs/-ēs/-īs/-ĕs
Genitive
rēg-es/-is/-os/-us
rēg-om/-um/-erum
ignis
ign-iom/-ium
Dative
rēg-ei/-ī/-ē/-ě
rēg-ebus/-ebūs
/-ibos/-ibus
ign-i/-eī/-ē
ign-ibus/-ibos
Accusative
rēgem
rēg-eīs/-īs/-ēs
ignim
ign-eīs/-ēs/-īs
Ablative
rēg-īd/-ĭd/-ī/-ē/-ĕ
rēg-ebus/-ebūs
/-ibos/-ibus
ign-īd/-ĭd
/-ī/-ē/-ĕ
ign-ebus/-ebūs
/-ibos/-ibus
Vocative
rēg/-s
rēg-eīs/-īs/-ēs/-ĕs
ign-is/-es
ign-eīs/-ēs/-īs/-ĕs
Locative
rēgī
rēgebos
ignī
ignibos
For the consonant declension, in the nominative singular, the -s was affixed directly to the stem consonant, but the combination of the two consonants produced modified nominatives over the Old Latin period. The case appears in different stages of modification in different words diachronically.32 The nominative as rēgs instead of rēx is an orthographic feature of Old Latin; the letter x was seldom used alone (as in the classical period) to designate the /ks/ or /gs/ sound, but instead, was written as either 'ks', 'cs', or even 'xs'. Often a collapse or syncope/apocope of the full nominative occurs: Old Latin nominus > Classical Latin nomen; hominus > homo; Caesarus > Caesar.33 The Latin neuter form (not shown) is the Indo-European nominative without stem ending; for example, cor < *cord "heart."34
The genitive singular endings include -is < -es and -us < *-os.35 In the genitive plural, some forms appear to affix the case ending to the genitive singular rather than the stem: regerum < *reg-is-um.36
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Old Latin - eNotes.com Reference
Old Latin (also called Early Latin or Archaic Latin) refers to the Latin ... Latin speakers of the empire had no reported trouble understanding old Latin, ...
In the dative singular, -ī succeeded -ēI and -ē after 200 BC.
In the accusative singular, -em < *-ṃ after a consonant.35
In the ablative singular, the -d was lost after 200 BC.22 In the dative and ablative plural, the early poets sometimes used -būs.22
In the locative singular, the earliest form is like the dative but over the period assimilated to the ablative.37
Fourth declension (u)
The 'U-Stem' declension. The stems of the nouns of the u-declension end in ŭ and are masculine, feminine and neuter. In addition is a ū-stem declension, which contains only a few "isolated" words, such as sūs, "pig", and is not presented here.38
senātus, –ūs
senate m.
Singular
Plural
Nominative
senātus
senātūs
Genitive
senāt-uos/-uis/-ī/-ous/-ūs
senāt-uom/-um
Dative
senātuī
senāt-ubus/-ibus
Accusative
senātum
senātūs
Ablative
senāt-ūd/-ud
senāt-ubus/-ibus
Vocative
senātus
senātūs
Locative
senāti
Fifth declension (e)
The 'E-Stem' declension.
Personal pronouns
Personal pronouns are among the most common thing found in Old Latin inscriptions. Note how in all three persons, the ablative singular ending is identical to the accusative singular.
Ego, I
Tu, You
Suī, Himself, Herself, Etc.
Nominative
ego
tu
-
Genitive
mis
tis
sei
Dative
mihei, mehei
tibei
sibei
Accusative
mēd
tēd
sēd
Ablative
mēd
tēd
sēd
Plural
Nominative
nōs
vōs
-
Genitive
nostrōm,
-ōrum, -i
vostrōm,
-ōrum, -i
sei
Dative
nōbeis, nis
vōbeis
sibei
Accusative
nōs
vōs
sēd
Ablative
nōbeis, nis
vōbeis
sēd
Relative pronoun
In Old Latin, the relative pronoun is also another common concept, especially in inscriptions. Unfortunately, the forms are quite inconsistent and leave much to be reconstructed by scholars.
queī, quaī, quod who, what
Masculine
Feminine
Neuter
Nominative
queī
quaī
quod
Genitive
quoius, quoios
quoia
quoium, quoiom
Dative
quoī, queī, quoieī, queī
Accusative
quem
quam
quod
Ablative
quī, quōd
quād
quōd
Plural
Nominative
ques, queis
quaī
qua
Genitive
quōm, quōrom
quōm, quārom
quōm, quōrom
Dative
queis, quīs
Accusative
quōs
quās
quōs
Ablative
queis, quīs
Verbs
Old present and perfects
There is not much actual proof of the inflection of Old Latin verb forms and the few inscriptions we have hold many inconsistencies between forms. Therefore, the forms below are ones that are both proven by scholars through Old Latin inscriptions, and recreated by scholars based on other early Indo-European languages such as Greek and Italic dialects such as Oscan and Umbrian.
Indicative Present: Sum
Indicative Present: Facio
Old
Classical
Old
Classical
Singular
Plural
Singular
Plural
Singular
Plural
Singular
Plural
First Person
som, esom
somos, sumos
sum
sumus
fac(e/ī)o
fac(e)imos
faciō
facimus
Second Person
es
esteīs
es
estis
fac(e/ī)s
fac(e/ī)teis
facis
facitis
Third Person
est
sont
est
sunt
fac(e/ī)d/-(e/i)t
fac(e/ī)ont
facit
faciunt
Indicative Perfect: Sum
Indicative Perfect: Facio
Old
Classical
Old
Classical
Singular
Plural
Singular
Plural
Singular
Plural
Singular
Plural
First Person
fuei
fuemos
fuī
fuimus
(fe)fecei
(fe)fecemos
fēcī
fēcimus
Second Person
fuistei
fuisteīs
fuistī
fuistis
(fe)fecistei
(fe)fecisteis
fēcistī
fēcistis
Third Person
fued/fuit
fueront/-erom
fuit
fuērunt
(fe)feced/-et
(fe)feceront/-erom
fēcit
fēcērunt/-ēre
Bibliography
Bennett, Charles Edwin (1895). Appendix to Bennett's Latin grammar for Teachers and Advanced Students. Boston: Allyn and Bacon.
Bennett, Charles Edwin (1907). The Latin language: a historical outline of its sounds, inflections, and syntax. Boston: Allyn and Bacon.
Bennett, Charles Edwin (1910). Syntax of Early Latin. Boston: Allyn and Bacon.
Buck, Carl Darling (1933). Comparative Grammar of Greek and Latin. Chicago: University of Chicago.
De Forest Allen, Frederic (1897). Remnants of Early Latin. Boston: Ginn & Company. http://books.google.com/books?id=I7EgAAAAMAAJ&printsec=titlepage&source=gbs_summary_r&cad=0.
Gildersleeve, Basil Lanneau; Lodge, Gonzalez (1900). Gildersleeve's Latin grammar (3rd ed.). New York, Boston, New Orleans, London: University Publishing Company.
Lindsay, Wallace Martin (1894). The Latin language: an historical account of Latin sounds, stems and flexions. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Palmer, Leonard Robert (1988) [1954]. The Latin language. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.
Roby, Henry John (1872). A grammar of the Latin language from Plautus to Suetonius. Volume I (2nd ed.). London: MacMillan and Co..
Wordsworth, John (1874). Fragments and specimens of early Latin, with Introduction and Notes. Oxford: Clarendon Press. http://books.google.com/books?id=67wUAAAAQAAJ&printsec=titlepage&source=gbs_summary_r&cad=0.
Sources
^ "Archaic Latin". The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition.
^ De Oratoribus, I.193.
^ Book IX.6.
^ Wordsworth, John (1874). p. v.
^ Histories III.22.
^ Bennett, C (1910). p. iii.
^ Bell, Andreas (1889). De Locativi in prisca latinitate vi et usu, dissertatio inauguralis philologica. Breslau: typis Grassi, Barthi et soc (W. Friedrich).
^ De Forest Allen (1897). p. 8. "There were no such names as Caius, Cnaius"
^ Allen (1897), p.6
^ Bennett, Charles Edwin (1915) [1895, 1908]. A Latin grammar. Boston, Chicago: Allyn and Bacon. p. 12.
^ Buck (1933), pp. 174–175.
^ Wordsworth (1874), p.45.
^ a b Buck (1933), p. 177.
^ Buck (1933), pp. 175–176.
^ a b Wordsworth (1874), p. 48.
^ a b c d Buck (1933), p. 176.
^ Buck (1933), p. 172.
^ Palmer (1988), p. 242.
^ Buck (1933), p. 173.
^ Buck (1933), pp. 99–100.
^ a b Palmer (1954), p. 243.
^ a b c d Allen (1897), p. 9.
^ Wordsworth (1874), p.56.
^ Lindsay (1894), p. 383.
^ Buck (1933), p. 182.
^ Buck (1933), p.181.
^ Grandgent, Charles Hall (1908) [1907]. An introduction to vulgar Latin. Heath's modern language series. Boston: D.C. Heath & Co.. p. 89.
^ Bennett (1907), p. 126.
^ Buck, Carl Darling (2005) [1904]. A Grammar Of Oscan And Umbrian: With A Collection Of Inscriptions And A Glossary. Languages of classical antiquity, vol. 5. Bristol, Pa.: Evolution Publishing. p. 204.
^ Buck (1933), p. 197.
^ Buck (1933), pp. 185–193.
^ Wordsworth (1874), pp. 67–73.
^ Roby (1872), p. 161.
^ Buck (1933), p. 185.
^ a b Bennett (1895), p. 117.
^ Roby (1872), p. 162.
^ Gildersleeve (1900), p. 18.
^ Buck (1933), pp. 198–201.
See also
Saturnian (verse form)
External links
Gippert, Jost (1994–2001). "Old Latin Inscriptions" (in German, English). Titus Didactica. http://titus.fkidg1.uni-frankfurt.de/didact/idg/ital/latinsc.htm. Retrieved 29 October 2009.
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