Mavrosh Posted May 9, 2009 Posted May 9, 2009 I have never learned latin, but maybe soemeone else has and can help me with something... I want "Artificial human" to be translated into latin... I know the two words - thanks google- but I know that there is several grammar cases in the latin language... so what would it be? Homo Artificiosus maybe? I have no idea... So if anyone knows it and could help... that would rock! :biggrin:
AzirAphale001 Posted May 9, 2009 Posted May 9, 2009 I don't know latin, but thanks to Google I don't need to. Maybe Homo Artificious?
skingrad24 Posted May 9, 2009 Posted May 9, 2009 This is my translation, I am studying Latin at high school and I have a professional dictionary. The word changes depending on what it means: NOMINATIVE the Artificial man does something = Homo arte factus facit aliquid GENITIVE the Artificial man's cat is running = Hominis arte facti felix currit DATIVE I gave an advice to the Artificial man = Dedi consilium Homini arte facto ACCUSATIVE I killed the Artificial man = Occidi Hominem arte factum ABLATIVE The cat is with the Artificial man = Felix c,u,m Homine arte facto est If you need the plural you have just to ask EDIT: Edited because the bad word transformer change the latin with "C U M" with soda pop,now it has more sense
Mavrosh Posted May 9, 2009 Author Posted May 9, 2009 o_O Oh wow, this is why I never learned latin... All these grammatical cases are the worst... Thank you very much! :)
Recommended Posts
Archived
This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.