I am very aware that my education is lacking, my secondary modern school didn't quite stretch to the Classics. I need to Google many of Colin Dexter's references in his Morse series and I'm sure many go unnoticed.
A top-class education is the only thing I envy in people but is there any way a mature adult can educate himself in Latin, Greek, Roman Mythology at home?
"Until the 60s, unless you had O level Latin, you couldn't get in to Oxford or Cambridge,"
Latin terms were (still are?) extensively used in medicine/pharmacy and the law. And study of Latin helps in understanding the etymology of modern languages.
Couple that with the fact that in the second declension, the "Dative" and "Ablative" cases have the same endings. I could never work out who was doing what to whom! So I packed it in after two years and did German instead.
NJ we had a very reluctant teacher who knew he was teacher pupils who did not want to learn -it was compulsory at our school for 12–14year-olds. All our lessons consisted of was translating English -Latin and vice versa (ha ha see what i did!) using a dictionary.
Latin is still used to identify plants. This is extremely useful as the plant has the same name whether you're in the UK or anywhere else in the world.
The only Latin sentence I can remember from studying it for a year is "multis viperis in silva sunt" - "there are many snakes in the wood".
I find the link between Latin and modern French interesting, for example with the verb être (English "to be", Latin "esse"):
Latin: sum, es, est, sumus, estis, sunt
French: je suis, tu es, il est, nous sommes, vous êtes, ils sont
I was taught Latin at school and I can't mind on the author but in the book we sometimes used later on, a fair few of the translated poems were erotic and explicit.
Before we could use the book, Mr Wright telt us to tape various pages together in case parents seen them.
D'ya know what, etch? I've never noticed that before (despite being familiar with the conjugations in both languages). You learn something new every day.
Can't mind on his first name but he also sometimes taught us French. He knew the grammar and the words but his French accent was non-existant and he pronounced the words as they were spelt.