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What is the latin for
"The Student is Always Wrong"?
Thanks
No best answer has yet been selected by LordMulberry. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.According to 'TOED' peccability means capability of sinning and peccancy means sinfulness, both English words derived from Latin peccare = to sin. It certainly seems to lack any suggestion of minor mistakes...this is moral faultiness. The University of British Columbia's online Latin/English dictionary - which is my usual source for such questions - takes the same viewpoint.
I still think, therefore, that any form of the 'peccare' idea is far too strong here.
o I use Dr Smith's smaller latin english dictionary, John Murray, 1887, wh gives examples;
pecco - miss, mistake, go wrong, err, commit a fault, offend, sin.
with acc, plautus, si unam peccassivisses syllabam
(if you had gone wrong with one syllable.....
can be limited with neuter adjective....
Empedocles multa alia peccat
(E. sins in many other ways)
with in and the accusative:
si quid in te peccavi, in me ipsum peccavi vehementius
(If I have wronged you, I have wrongedmyself more)
The English translations are my own by the way. Pecco can mean more than sin, as the more poetical brethren above obviously sensed
there must be a latinist out there, can they help?
Oh and while we are discussing uses of pecco, dont lets forget Clive of India's coded message when he had taken the Indian town of Sind, "Peccavi"