Latin For Spell-Casting
This book covers the basics of Latin pronunciation and word-formation. It will be able to help you pronounce your spells better so that you can get better results, and also give you the tools you need to be able to create new spells of your own. This book is written by a PhD student in Linguistics at a muggle university. **THIS BOOK IS CURRENTLY UNDER CONSTRUCTION** (Only chapters 1-3, and 5 are complete. This does include the chapter on the basics of Latin pronunciation.)
Last Updated
05/31/21
Chapters
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Parts Of Speech
Chapter 5
We can classify words according to their Part of Speech (also known as Syntactic Category). Words that belong to different Parts of Speech have different properties, so identifying a word's Part of Speech is important for using it correctly. A word's Part of Speech affects two properties: where it can appear in a sentence, and which suffixes and prefixes it can take.
Traditionally, some of the different Parts of Speech were defined as follows:
Noun: person, place, or thing
Verb: state or action
Adjective: describes a noun
Adverb: describes a verb, adjective, or clause
Preposition: Describes the location of a noun
The traditional definitions of Parts of Speech are not fool-proof. For example, the word destruction is an action so you might think it is a verb, but it is, in fact, a noun, while the word greed can be used to describe a noun, so looks like an adjective, but it is itself a noun. Sometimes, the same word can even appear as multiple different Parts of Speech. For example, the word work is a noun in I'll see you after work, an adjective in Did you wash my work clothes? and a verb in I will work all night. Linguists identify a word's Part of Speech by looking at its properties, but you can also figure it out by looking it up in a dictionary. If you would like to learn how to identify a word's Part of Speech, I suggest you sign up for a linguistics course at the closest muggle university!
The next 5 chapters deal with how nouns, verbs, and adjectives are formed in Latin. These are the Parts of Speech that are used most often in spell-casting, and also the Parts of Speech that have the most complex word-formation properties. Spells that use the other Parts of Speech--those listed above, and still others--will be discussed in chapter 12.
There are two types of prefixes and suffixes a word can take. In chapters 6-8, we will look at the inflectional suffixes of various Parts of Speech in Latin. Inflectional suffixes encode the grammatical properties of the word and can apply to nearly any word of a particular Part of Speech. For example, the English plural marker -s marks a property of a noun (whether it is plural or not) and can modify nearly any noun--except for a few irregular nouns. Afterwards, we will look at some derivational suffixes in chapters 9-10. Derivational suffixes change a word from one Part of Speech to another. For example, the English derivational suffix -er can take a verb like bake and change it into a noun like baker.