Study of conversational Latin and ex tempore expression in LatinThe use of Latin for conversation and ex tempore discourse was a significant element in the culture of learned people in the humanist age and the early modern era.This book explores that phenomenon and the considerable amount of evidence pertaining to it in the primary sources written in the period.The author takes into account the use of spoken Latin both inside and outside the academic world. Examining disputes over pronunciation and different views about ex tempore eloquence among Latin writers active in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, the author shows that these 'conversations' are not unrelated to much better known discussions and debates about the nature of Latin prose style and eloquence in an age when Latin was no one's native language. The book thus reveals that understanding the role of conversation and ex tempore expression in Latin helps us to understand the early modern phenomenon of Neo-Latin in general. All texts in this volume are in Latin.
Terence O. Tunberg is Professor of Latin Language and Literature at the University of Kentucky and is co-Director of the University of Kentucky Institute for Latin Studies. He is member of the Academia Latinitati Fovendae
RERUM CONSPECTUSPraefatiuncula I. De argumento nostroII. De linguae Latinae usu scholasticoIII. De colloquiis familiaribusIV. De CiceronianisV. De pronuntiatuVI. De Latine colloquendi usu et utilitateVII. Paucula quaedam de rebus a saec. XVIII usque ad saec. XX gestisVIII. Verba quaedam et locutiones, quae ad Latine colloquendi facultatem orationemve extemporalem pertinentEpilogus. Quid de litterarum Latinarum patrimonio senserint studiorum humanitatis fautores Conspectus librorum et commentationumIndex nominum selectorum