No there isn't - that's from mensis, month.
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Originally posted by mercia View PostI'm trying to think of any modern word that has derived from mensa
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Originally posted by mercia View PostI'm trying to think of any modern word that has derived from mensa
Ha! And at the other end of the Empire, Romanian masăIt 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 jean View PostIn the sentence you have before you, the only noun it could refer to is extract.
If I'd wanted it to refer to Latin, to make any sense I'd have needed to use the adjective useless rather than the noun uselessness, wouldn't I?
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It's not particularly odd that there's no common English word derived from mensa - after all, we've got all those Germanic roots to accommodate.
What is odd is that modern Romance languages don't use that root for the things they dine off, either - French table, Italian tavola and indeed our own table are derived from Latin tabula, a board or plank. This is possibly because the Roman dining table was much lower than later versions, or otherwise not identifiable as the same piece of furniture.
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostIt seems rather ambiguous to me too. Is your your explanation of why it is not ambiguous based on the principles of Latin grammar?
But tell me, how does the sentence work if you make Latin the referent of it?
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Originally posted by jean View PostNo - don't try to foist that one on me!
But tell me, how does the sentence work if you make Latin the referent of it?
That's another ambiguity, surely?
Isn't the problem the two different verbs: `is cited' and `isn't'?
In the editing I do, I often have to ask authors what the `it' refers to in their writing.
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When our very good Latin teacher left us for a 1-term sabbatical, 2 years before our O-levels, she was temporarily replaced by another teacher who destroyed our love of the language. We nicknamed him "Plumbum" in view of his teaching style, and then organised a skiving rota for the rest of the term. By the time he had left, we had covered only 7 pages of The Approach to Latin Book 2.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostBut it isn't really cited?
That's another ambiguity, surely?
But the 'really', being marked off by commas and at the end of the sentence, is a gloss on what immediately precedes it rather than on the initial statement.
Isn't the problem the two different verbs: `is cited' and `isn't'?
In the editing I do, I often have to ask authors what the `it' refers to in their writing.Last edited by jean; 16-04-15, 10:12.
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Originally posted by jean View PostOnly if you assume I make a statement and immediately contradict it.
But the 'really', being marked off by commas and at the end of the sentence, is a gloss on what immediately precedes it rather than on the initial statement.
Only if you think they aren't two different verbs, but that the second is really short for 'isn't cited'.
If you said that to me, I would ask you how the sentence works if anything but the exract is the referent of it.
Something like: The extract is often cited as proof.....but in fact it shows that.....?
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostSomething like: The extract is often cited as proof.....but in fact it shows that.....?
Which is almost exactly what I wrote, and is pellucid in its clarity except to the naturally stupid [sic].
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Originally posted by jean View PostSomething more like The extract is often cited as proof.....but in fact it isn't proof of that at all.
Which is almost exactly what I wrote, and is pellucid in its clarity except to the naturally stupid [sic].
The longer sentence is much better and clearer for those who do not have English as their mother tongue (such as many of those I work with), not just the naturally stupid.
(But I WOULDN'T have queried your original!)
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Originally posted by jean View PostSomething more like The extract is often cited as proof.....but in fact it isn't proof of that at all.
Which is almost exactly what I wrote, and is pellucid in its clarity except to the naturally stupid [sic].
& I'm not naturally stupid - it's taken a lot of hard work over the years.
(mostly by other people)
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