Thanks Mary. I suspected it was Scots patois. We called our Latin teacher 'magister', as in "salvete pueri...salve magister".
Music teaching and outcomes in schools
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostWe called our Latin teacher 'magister'It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostCasting my mind back over the decades, I think the 'MAG' had a slightly weaker stress than the 'TER'...which we pronouncesd as 'tair'. We had to use a hard 'g' which went against the grain for those of us who sang Latin in the choir!
It is in some areas stressed on the second syllable (-gis-), otherwise on the first. I've never known it stressed on the third ...It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostYou stressed it on the final syllable!?
It is in some areas stressed on the second syllable (-gis-), otherwise on the first. I've never known it stressed on the third ...
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostYes it was MAG (short and stressed) IS (short and unstressed) TAIR (long and slightly more stressed). I think!
For example, I remember the class chanting: a-MO, a-MAS, a-MAT, a-MA-mus, a-MA-tis, a-MANT; whereas phonological changes demand that the verb was stressed on the first syllable, except in the 1st and 2nd persons plural.
Another boring digression, but I find such things fascinating. But apologise
On 'magister', I've found suggestions that German pronunciation stresses the middle syllable and I think I've heard it in religious/monastic circles here too.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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A speciality of our Latin master was to give is a 10 word vocab to learn each night. The test the next day would often consist of a single sentence stringing all the words to gether, so we had to get tenses, plurals (and no doubt other things I've forgotten) correct:
e.g Marcus, clad in the general's tent, slept under the shadow of the knees.
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PS A little while ago, on these boards I think, there was a discussion about the pronunciation of Latin. It had started off commenting on the current fashionable deviations from traditional sung (i.e. Italianate) Latin. But some scholarly person (I forget who) widened the discussion to Classical or 'school' Latin. Apperently the latter has not always been consistent and has not always used the soft 'v'. We definitely said, for veni, vidi, vici, waynee, weedy, weeky; but I gather it was not always thus.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostPS A little while ago, on these boards I think, there was a discussion about the pronunciation of Latin. It had started off commenting on the current fashionable deviations from traditional sung (i.e. Italianate) Latin. But some scholarly person (I forget who) widened the discussion to Classical or 'school' Latin. Apperently the latter has not always been consistent and has not always used the soft 'v'. We definitely said, for veni, vidi, vici, waynee, weedy, weeky; but I gather it was not always thus.
Throughout my teaching career, I taught kids using 'vaynee' not 'waynee' (to hell with the Inspectorate!). But I also devoted some lessons to examining how the Romans pronounced their own language, and the evidence for it. Kids love a red herring, and learn better for it. Hence my scorn for a closely defined National Curriculum and detailed lesson-plans: it so easily starves kids and teachers of the joy of shared discovery. A teacher needs to sniff the air and go with the flow.
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"Salve, magister". I'd suggest that the reason for the stress on the ultimate syllable of 'magister' is the sing-song effect of a class speaking in chorus - and perhaps not without a little tired irony. There is no real doubt that the word is properly accented 'primary-unstressed-secondary'.
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