oloriel: (only good language is a dead language)
[personal profile] oloriel


You know your brain is a silly place when...

in the light of the papal election, somebody translates "You can has cheezburger" into Latin and makes it Potes habere bubula cum caseus and your first reaction is "But wait, bubula should be in the accusative, so, bubulam, and cum requires the ablative case, so it should be caseo..."
And your second reaction is "But well, 'You can has cheezburger' is grammatically incorrect, too, so maybe this is intentional?"

... and you still haven't made up your mind whether it should be corrected or not.
*facepalms*
Maybe I should just ask.

Of course, these days you can't be certain that your cheeseburger is actually made of beef, so maybe equinam would be more appropriate anyway?

Date: 2013-03-15 08:43 am (UTC)
ext_45018: (lww - adorably geeky)
From: [identity profile] oloriel.livejournal.com
All those dead Romans :P Look, when I translate into (or from) any language, I always work on the hypothesis that it's a living language with native speakers and linguistic trends and idioms. What's fair for Quenya is surely fair for Latin.

I agree, though, a more concise and idiomatic term would of course be preferable. Then again, in the written versions that have come down to us, Roman recipes often have rather unwieldy names as well? Isicia omentata means burgers made of minced meat (...whatever meat), so that might be better than bubula, but it's not exactly quick to pronounce, either.
"I'll take the IsOm with bread and cheese. And extra garum!" ;)
Edited Date: 2013-03-15 10:02 am (UTC)

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