Harry Potter 🪄 Latin in Magic Spells 🧙‍♂️

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 22. 07. 2024
  • Are the magic spells in Harry Potter actual Latin? And why is Latin associated with magic? Watch and find out!
    🦂 Support my work on Patreon:
    / lukeranieri
    ☕️ Support my work with PayPal:
    paypal.me/lukeranieri
    📚 Luke Ranieri Audiobooks:
    luke-ranieri.myshopify.com
    Support the channel by joining it:
    / @polymathy_luke
    🏛 Latin by the Ranieri-Dowling Method: luke-ranieri.myshopify.com/co...
    🏺Ancient Greek by the Ranieri-Dowling Method: luke-ranieri.myshopify.com/co...
    🏛 Ancient Greek in Action · Free Greek Lessons:
    • Ancient Greek in Actio...
    👨‍🏫 My Lingua Latina Per Se Illustrata playlist · Free Latin Lessons:
    • Greetings in Latin · L...
    🦂 ScorpioMartianus (my channel entirely in Latin & Ancient Greek)
    / polymathyluke
    🎙 Hundreds of hours of Latin & Greek audio:
    lukeranieri.com/audio
    🌍 polýMATHY website:
    lukeranieri.com/polymathy/
    🌅 polýMATHY on Instagram:
    / lukeranieri
    😊 polýMATHY on Facebook:
    / lukepolymath
    🦁 Legio XIII Latin Language Podcast:
    / legioxiii
    👕 Merch:
    teespring.com/stores/scorpiom...
    🦂 www.ScorpioMartianus.com
    🦅 www.LukeRanieri.com
    ☕️ Supported in part by LanguageMugs.com : languagemugs.com/shop/?wpam_i...
    📖 My book Ranieri Reverse Recall on Amazon:
    amzn.to/2nVUfqd
    Outro music: Overture of Die Zauberflöte (The Magic Flute) by Mozart
    Etymology of glamour: en.wiktionary.org/wiki/glamou...
    00:00 Intro
    00:20 The spells of Harry Potter
    08:20 Why is Latin considered magical?
    10:30 True Blood
    13:00 woosh 🪄

Komentáře • 796

  • @new_donker7189
    @new_donker7189 Před 3 lety +510

    - ACTUALLY, Hermione, It's 'rèparo' not 'repàro'.
    - But the spell worked.
    - I DON'T CARE.

    • @Philrc
      @Philrc Před 2 lety +2

      You have the accent on the a of reparo facing the wrong way it would be Á, if it needed an accent which it doesn't because these words come from Portuguese and any word with three syllables or more has its accent on the penultimate syllable by default unless it has a diacritic mark over the syllable you need to emphasise

    • @PC_Simo
      @PC_Simo Před 3 měsíci

      ⁠​⁠@@Philrc Well; that means that the accent on ”E”, in ”réparo”, is also facing the wrong way. It needs to be: ”É”: ”Réparo”; and, there, you actually need an accent; since the stress is on the antepenultimate syllable.

    • @Philrc
      @Philrc Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@PC_Simo there should not be any accenr on the e because it is pronounced rePARo no REparo. Nor on the a as i already said. The word doesn't need any accents at all.

    • @PC_Simo
      @PC_Simo Před 3 měsíci

      @@Philrc Yes, but to demonstrate the hypothetical negative example of ”REparo”.

    • @Philrc
      @Philrc Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@PC_Simo I'm sorry but that's a completely meaningless sentence

  • @ErasersRoq
    @ErasersRoq Před 3 lety +1201

    I don't know if you've ever played the game, but I would like to see you review the Latin language setting in Minecraft.

    • @Someone-ym1ny
      @Someone-ym1ny Před 3 lety +41

      I second this

    • @rafaellucascarvalho464
      @rafaellucascarvalho464 Před 3 lety +33

      Oof, good ideia!!

    • @DTux5249
      @DTux5249 Před 3 lety +86

      There's a Latin setting for Minecraft?

    • @Stripeyman
      @Stripeyman Před 3 lety +179

      @@DTux5249 Yup! There's a lot of interesting language settings for Minecraft, including Anglish (Fully germanic English) and Pirate Speak (Yarr harr English). Really neat stuff.

    • @DTux5249
      @DTux5249 Před 3 lety +8

      @@Stripeyman bruh, Imma have to check this out lol

  • @thadeusgaspar224
    @thadeusgaspar224 Před 3 lety +618

    the use of pseudo-latin jargons, also known as "dog latin" has been staple between real life magicians for centuries, Hocus Pocus for instance.

    • @pterispertinax2868
      @pterispertinax2868 Před 3 lety +109

      Lingua Latina caniformis

    • @Glassandcandy
      @Glassandcandy Před 3 lety +89

      Hocus pocus is actually an old Protestant jab at the Catholic Eucharist. It’s a corruption of “Hoc est Corpus” taken obviously from the transubstantiation. The implication being that the mass and the Eucharist was nothing more than smoke and mirrors, or a bunch of “hocus pocus” you might say lol

    • @CM-ss5pe
      @CM-ss5pe Před 3 lety +38

      @@Glassandcandy Actually, that's a commonly stated thing that's not proven to be true and it's generally not accepted by linguists. Most sources claim the phrase was coined in 'pseudo-Latin' (alongside other such phrases) specifically because it sounded magical-like and magicians used it while performing.

    • @Glassandcandy
      @Glassandcandy Před 3 lety +34

      @@CM-ss5pe Your comment got me to look into it. My linguistics professor in college was the one who told me that it was "hoc est corpus", but as you bring up, it's not universally accepted. From what I'm able to find, whether it's "hoc est corpus" or pseudo-latin "hax pax max Deus adimax" is a matter of debate and intrigue. Though I was able to find that there is linguistic evidence from Polish use of the phrase that suggests the "hoc est corpus" route more than "hax max". In Polish, the phrase "hocus pocus" is apparently often followed by "pilato pas" which is eerily similar to "sub Pontio Pilato passus." Interesting stuff but, alas, like many other subjects in historical linguists, lacking a smoking gun conclusion it seems.

    • @desanipt
      @desanipt Před 3 lety +7

      Macaronic Latin

  • @Myrmidon_Maxinobia
    @Myrmidon_Maxinobia Před 3 lety +103

    Luke hating Anglicized Latin pronunciations is showing his inter Romanization, he is truly a champion of culture that we've needed

    • @DieFlabbergast
      @DieFlabbergast Před 3 lety +3

      *inner Romanness maybe? ("Romanization" is the transliteration of other scripts into the Latin alphabet)

  • @jeannebouwman1970
    @jeannebouwman1970 Před 3 lety +133

    It is also interesting that Japanese wizard children first need to learn ancient japanese to be able to speak their spells, so apparently there is some power to the ancient languages

    • @luckneh5330
      @luckneh5330 Před 3 lety +34

      I think it's partially due to spells being passed down from generations and thus not changing what the spells are. I think that's my theory

    • @jeannebouwman1970
      @jeannebouwman1970 Před 3 lety +6

      @@luckneh5330 yeah but I wonder why that is more the case in Japan than in Britain, since Hogwarts students don't have to learn Latin to be able to pronounce spells. Maybe it is respect for the past that they keep it rigid?

    • @eldricgrubbidge6465
      @eldricgrubbidge6465 Před 3 lety +11

      It's usually"ancient wisdom" and "occult" in the old sense. So it makes sense that it's associated with old languages and runes and things.

    • @masalanicholoff3593
      @masalanicholoff3593 Před 3 lety +3

      @@jeannebouwman1970 It probably has to do with when and where a spell was invented. The incantation for the Four Point Spell (which turns the user's wand into a compass) is just "point me".

    • @michaelheliotis5279
      @michaelheliotis5279 Před 2 lety +4

      The words are not even necessary to cast the spells, which they make a bigger point about in the books. The incantations are basically just mnemonics to help the user focus their mind and direct their will in the way that's necessary for the spell. So Masala is probably right that whoever came up with the spell just made up the incantation in whatever language was prevalent at the time and place. And Luke is probably right that as the incantations were used more, the pronunciation evolved a little. It's also established that Latin is pretty much only used in Europe and the Anglosphere because that's the lanugage that was used there historically, and outside of Europe they just use whatever language that happens to have been used there historically.

  • @Verismo1004
    @Verismo1004 Před 3 lety +434

    Gryffindors - do not care about correct Latin usage.
    Slytherins - only care about correct Latin usage to feel superior.
    Ravenclaws - definitely care about correct Latin usage and will let you know it.
    Hufflepuffs - enjoy both correct Latin and Latin-inspired words and make videos about them on youtube.

    • @olegtarasovrodionov
      @olegtarasovrodionov Před 2 lety +9

      Why Hermione Granger was not put in ravenclaws?

    • @thatsoundslikeheresytomeyo4960
      @thatsoundslikeheresytomeyo4960 Před 2 lety +37

      @@olegtarasovrodionov because she is a main character, silly.

    • @guadalu
      @guadalu Před 2 lety +1

      I'm such a hufflepuff hahaha

    • @sarantis1995
      @sarantis1995 Před 2 lety +3

      @@olegtarasovrodionov JKR has stated that the sorting hat was thinking of assigning her in Ravenclaw

    • @FalconWindblader
      @FalconWindblader Před 2 lety +2

      @@olegtarasovrodionov Not everyone in the houses fit their stereotypes, & people do generally fit in more than one house. The sorting hat simply choose the one that is closest, if the sorted one doesn't have any particular preference, or in the case where the sorted one does have a preference, the hat would take said preference into consideration. In the case of Hermione, it's either she preferring to be in Gryffindor, or the hat simply finds her fitting better there than in the Ravenclaw. The hat did almost sort Harry into Slytherin after all.

  • @igorfray
    @igorfray Před 3 lety +188

    0:57 JK Rowling lived in Portugal while was writing a part of first book, so think that "Oculus reparo" is portuguese trying to look like latin, "Óculos" is actually glasses 🤓 in Portuguese and "reparo" is pronounced in that way in Portuguese 😅😅😅

    • @Gab8riel
      @Gab8riel Před 3 lety +5

      It's definitely not pronounced with an English R

    • @igorfray
      @igorfray Před 3 lety +17

      @@Gab8riel of course the actors are British, even real latin words in the movies comes with a British accent💁🏻‍♂️😂

    • @sikeman
      @sikeman Před 3 lety +8

      I thought the same thing, I had no idea that she lived in Portugal, so I was quite confused as to why she used Portuguese in that spell hahahaha

    • @Nicamon
      @Nicamon Před 3 lety +2

      @@igorfray I was a bit disappointed to see that in this video he didn't use the italian version of the movies!😅

    • @bestexperience3317
      @bestexperience3317 Před 2 lety +5

      en español REPARO se pronuncia igual, pero Oculus no existe, existe "lentes" o "anteojos"

  • @andreageuna6649
    @andreageuna6649 Před 3 lety +71

    Harry Potter's "Latin" looks like my grandparents' ecclesiastical Latin. As the great majority of Italians, they were Catholic and attended the weekly mass, but they were almost illiterate (as many Italian peasants used to be). Until 1960s the mass was in Latin and they tried to reproduce the wordings: "ra prenobbi" for "ora pro nobis", "l'era pru veja" (in Piedmontese dialect: "well, she was old", praying for a dead woman...) for "ora pro ea", "benedittu fruttu ventu tu Iesu" for "benedictus fructus ventris tuis Jesus", etc.
    In Italian popular wordings for a magic spell (in children tales, of course) is "ocus pocus" from "hoc est corpus meum". As far as I know, in Russian magic is "fokus" for this reason

    • @cerberaodollam
      @cerberaodollam Před rokem +5

      "the father, the son, and into the hole he goes" 😂

    • @sirknight4981
      @sirknight4981 Před rokem

      @@cerberaodollam
      Nice to see a fellow Dave Allen enjoyer here. 😎

  • @graf
    @graf Před 3 lety +411

    some spells later on in the books get closer to correct latin, like "vulnera sanentur"
    expecto patronum first appeared in the 3rd book, but those are only two examples.

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před 3 lety +84

      Interesting! Do you think JKR did this deliberately?

    • @chideraalexanderdex547
      @chideraalexanderdex547 Před 3 lety +77

      @@polyMATHY_Luke I think so, the British do place value on Latin and she seems to know it at least a bit, dumbledore's first name is Albus, Snape's first name is Severus(and he is a strict dude) plus spells like expellio armus are similar to what could pass for Latin or what Latin speakers might see as familiar, it's the jamming of the words that makes no sense

    • @drogadepc
      @drogadepc Před 3 lety +8

      There's Imperium too

    • @sebastiangudino9377
      @sebastiangudino9377 Před 3 lety +12

      @@polyMATHY_Luke I don't think any of her decisions are deliberated...

    • @drogadepc
      @drogadepc Před 3 lety +45

      @@sebastiangudino9377 she studied latin, so I think she deliberated only used latin as a base for the names/chanting of the spells. It could make sense in real life.
      If wizards and witches did have magical capabilities, they would most likely creat jargons or even a new language.

  • @vytah
    @vytah Před 3 lety +42

    Another word that also derives from "grammatica" is "grimoire", which means "spellbook" and came to English from French. It looks like the same exact association happened at least twice.

  • @pingu7471
    @pingu7471 Před 3 lety +316

    Kinda dissapointed that even Hermione doesn't know the penultimate stress rule. My day is ruined
    But in my opinion, for the spells not to be real latin is rather smart. Just imagine how much havoc it would have created if a roman peasant shouts something and suddenly his goat turns into a fine venetian glass cup. Or a roman client would call upon his patron, and suddenly his warthog-patronus appears and scares the shit out of everyone.
    Let's rather stick with the wannabe-latin please.

    • @djat7933
      @djat7933 Před 3 lety +29

      My disappointment is immeasurable and my day has been ruined.

    • @leaf900
      @leaf900 Před 3 lety +20

      yeah pretty much, if we assume magic hasn't changed that much since around 1000AD with the founding of hogwarts those students would've been fluent Latin speakers. it's deliberately NOT grammatically correct Latin (and why should it be anyway)

    • @NH-rn3wz
      @NH-rn3wz Před 3 lety +17

      Maybe it’s because she has a Greek name and therefore knows Greek much better?

    • @depressedaemon
      @depressedaemon Před 3 lety +7

      As long as we are playing with this idea is clearly stated in the books that magic is something that one born with, so if a non wizard would pronounce the correct spell and somehow even holding a magic wand, it would not work.

    • @pingu7471
      @pingu7471 Před 3 lety +2

      @@depressedaemon Well, but not all wizards are detected, are they?

  • @valenesco45
    @valenesco45 Před 3 lety +276

    Cmon Luke...it's LEVIÓSA, not LEVIOSÀ

  • @dawn8293
    @dawn8293 Před 3 lety +81

    Alternate title: A Latin scholar spends 13 minutes trying to convince himself (and us) that it doesn't matter that Harry Potter's Latin is so bafflingly bad.
    10/10 would watch again. I love this stuff

    • @DieFlabbergast
      @DieFlabbergast Před 3 lety +4

      Given that it's a fictional universe in which magic exists, it would be very odd if the language WERE correct Latin.

    • @dawn8293
      @dawn8293 Před 3 lety +3

      I can get behind that, although the British English seems to be correct, and the names of all the countries, and other things seem pretty similar.
      But the books never claim that the spells are in Latin. It is my headcannon that 1. When spells are created, the creator of the spell has full artistic licence on what the spell is called, 2. Most classic spells were invented when using Latin for research was in vogue, 3. It may have been considered bad practice to use real Latin, as it was already a real language that people used for speaking.

  • @desanipt
    @desanipt Před 3 lety +158

    Honestly, the spells in Harry Potter just sound A LOT like Macaronic Latin.
    Probably not new information to anyone, but it basically is a code language. It is simply regular modern languages (each modern language builds a Macarronic Latin of its own), adapted to sound like Latin (by randomly adding typical Latin sufixes/case endings to words, using loose Latin syntax and by pronouncing it somewhat like Latin, all while being complety based in regular modern languages). Through the centuries, all through Europe, it was very popular in universities and used in plays and satires for comedic purposes (the goliards are probably some of the first well known users of it).
    JK Rowling is notourious for having taken a lot of inspiration from Portuguese university traditions when writing Harry Potter. Of course the fact that Latin is viewed as this "mystical" language stands on its own, but I wouldn't be impressed if she was at least a bit influenced by university traditions on that too. Might be just a coincidence but "oculus reparo" sounds a lot like how we could say "repair glasses" in Portuguese Macarronic Latin ("óculos" meaning "glasses" in regular Portuguese).
    Macarronic Latin based on Portuguese is everywhere on traditional university student groups here in Portugal. There is this "institution" (it's really just the students of each university that stablish it) we call "praxe" [from Latin praxis] that mOsTLy tries to integrate new students (it's polemic...). It comes down to senior students bossing arround freshmen collectively to do the most stupid/comic things all while setting a ton of rules, and making the freshmen pay them huge respect (almost like royal respect). The irony of the amount of rules and respect that is set, all while asking to do stupid things (and the seniors themselves being super bohemiam in all aspects that go beyond setting the rules and the respect) is part of the fun. Latin being the traditional language of institutions of power, law, doctors, religion etc., makes fake Latin immensely fitting with the mood of it all. And it is used in the "praxe" in everything from the written announcements/posters used, to chants, motos, etc.
    Dvra Praxis Sed Praxis

    • @drogadepc
      @drogadepc Před 3 lety +1

      Yeah, the University of Coimbra, where she studied for some time, was on of her inspirations to create Harry Potter.
      She was also inspired by the boarding school she went as a teen.

    • @desanipt
      @desanipt Před 3 lety +5

      @@drogadepc I don't think she ever studied in Coimbra. She did live in Porto (which has a quite lively university life) for quite some years where she was an English teacher (she even got married and had a kid there, not the most fortunate story, though).

    • @gabrielmarquestrindade7804
      @gabrielmarquestrindade7804 Před 3 lety

      portugal caralho

    • @lilypond5158
      @lilypond5158 Před 3 lety +1

      @@drogadepc I remember her saying in an interview that she never went to a boarding school.

    • @moondust2365
      @moondust2365 Před 2 lety +1

      If feel like there's also the chance that "oculus reparo" was simply based on Latinized English, "oculus" being a synonym to "glasses" or "eye glass" that's derived from Latin, and "reparo" being a Latinized version of the English word "repair" which I think comes from French.

  • @fortunaaudacesiuvat
    @fortunaaudacesiuvat Před 3 lety +178

    It's a book written for Muggles, so obviously she wouldn't reveal the actual Latin spells.

  • @jesusisraelcaudilloramirez6237

    I remember hearing those words in the movies specially expecto patronum, Spanish is my first language so what I hear is "espero/esperando al patron/jefe" basically "waiting for the boss" a very confusing spell and "oculus reparo" sounds like corrective eye surgery.

  • @konkonvulpix8712
    @konkonvulpix8712 Před 3 lety +13

    Knowledge of Latin could perhaps provide an interesting new understanding of expecto patronum. It may imply that, unlike most wizard spells where one waves a wand and makes something happen through one’s own magical ability, the spell potentially relies upon an external entity that you call and await its aid in a form that best suits you, like an ancient deity or spirit in real life magical rituals. Harry Potter is a warlock.

  • @herpyderpy2869
    @herpyderpy2869 Před 3 lety +18

    Me, a Potterhead and language enthusiast (with bias to Latin): Who has summoned me?

  • @Mary.R.
    @Mary.R. Před 3 lety +14

    Just found this gem of a channel and have been hooked for several hours non-stop! Thanks for the great content. Love everything that you do.

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před 3 lety

      You're very kind, Mary. Thanks so much for watching.

  • @djat7933
    @djat7933 Před 3 lety +66

    Didn't know this until recently, but J.K. Rowling has a BA in classics.

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před 3 lety +59

      In that case her inventions were surely quite deliberate

    • @cahallo5964
      @cahallo5964 Před 3 lety +35

      @@polyMATHY_Luke or she was a terrible student

    • @goergops9593
      @goergops9593 Před 3 lety +8

      Grammar Translation GONE WRONG

    • @omegacardboard5834
      @omegacardboard5834 Před 3 lety +5

      Yeah her stories are quite mythological. It makes sense

    • @djat7933
      @djat7933 Před 3 lety +1

      @@goergops9593 This made me spit out my water LOL

  • @caimansaurus5564
    @caimansaurus5564 Před 3 lety +4

    luke you should really consider doing more linguistics-focused vids, like e.g the different variants of spoken latin that diverged into the modern romance languages, or proto-italic -> latin evolution, or the purported link between celtic and italic languages, or the different variants of "standard latin" in the european middle ages. with your amazing expertise and presentation i think tons of people would love that - there's a big audience on youtube for deep-dive linguistics videos.
    i really enjoy your work!

  • @AlbonitumG
    @AlbonitumG Před 3 lety +3

    Stumbled upon your channel a few days ago, you really make me want to start learning Latin.

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před 3 lety

      You should! I have lots of materials on my other channel ScorpioMartianus

    • @AlbonitumG
      @AlbonitumG Před 3 lety

      @@polyMATHY_Luke I will check it out, thanks!

  • @BrowardHeron
    @BrowardHeron Před 3 lety +35

    I was actually just thinking about this the other day after hearing a random Harry potter spell. It didn’t sound natural at all to me haha

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před 3 lety +10

      Haha nope. I tried to rationalize it as best I could.

    • @NH-rn3wz
      @NH-rn3wz Před 3 lety +4

      Good job on beating Hannibal BTW…he was a real pain in the ass

  • @landofw56
    @landofw56 Před 3 lety +28

    Nesciebam originem verbi "glamour" . Gratias, magister, tua doctrina.

  • @AleksandrPodyachev
    @AleksandrPodyachev Před 3 lety +14

    Can you make a video on attempts to modernize Latin so that it can be used in the modern day to talk about modern items, like cars, telephones, and computers?

    • @whukriede
      @whukriede Před 3 lety +2

      The Vatican does this.

    • @marcusdowning
      @marcusdowning Před 3 lety +3

      The Vatican's dictionary has words for 'spaceship', 'radiation', 'password'...
      I'd like to hear your opinion on it.

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před 3 lety +3

      I have indeed czcams.com/video/S-s3Wfdt2y8/video.html

  • @rev.athanasius
    @rev.athanasius Před 3 lety +24

    In fact as it had been mentioned J.K.R. is well educated in Classics and it is all quite a lot deliberate. And there are in fact a Latin and an Ancient Greek translation of the first book of the series which were made after her request. Thanks for your videos.

  • @samuelterry6354
    @samuelterry6354 Před 3 lety +61

    Interestingly one of the few spells not based on Latin is Avada Kedavra; which is actually Aramaic.

    • @bacicinvatteneaca
      @bacicinvatteneaca Před 3 lety

      Isn't kedavra based on cadaver?

    • @chrisrudolf9839
      @chrisrudolf9839 Před 3 lety +10

      @@bacicinvatteneaca No, it is based on the Aramaic words that are discussed as a probable origin of the real world "magic" word Abrakadabra

    • @marioluigi9599
      @marioluigi9599 Před 3 lety +2

      Don't forget "Point me". Otherwise how to find north?

    • @samuelterry6354
      @samuelterry6354 Před 3 lety +1

      I think it means "Let it be destroyed".

    • @DieFlabbergast
      @DieFlabbergast Před 3 lety +1

      That's a stretch. Wiktionary says "No supporting evidence."
      Wiktionary: From Late Latin abracadabra, a word used in magical writings, of uncertain origin. Relationships have been suggested with Abraxas (a Gnostic deity), and with various Aramaic or Hebrew terms עברא כדברא‎ (avra kedavra, literally “what was said has come to pass”), עַבְדָא כְּדַברָא‎ (avda kedavara, literally “what was said has been done”); ארבע-אחד-ארבע‎ (arba-eḥad-arba, literally “four-one-four”),[1] but there is little supporting evidence.

  • @robjj4769
    @robjj4769 Před 3 lety +8

    GOTCHA!!!!! Fantastico un video su Harry Potter ed il latino. STUPEFICIUM per adesso e alla prossima volta, Luke. 👍😁😁👋👋

  • @christiano.bryanblancobarr6183

    5:12 I think Lockhart is actually saying “volat et ascendere” which could translate to “he flies and to ascend”

  • @UltraVega924
    @UltraVega924 Před 3 lety +2

    I randomly watched a video from this channel the other day. Somehow, one video turned into many. Unexpectedly won me over. Had to subscribe.

  • @ConsciousEntrepeneur
    @ConsciousEntrepeneur Před 3 lety +6

    Your videos put a smile to my face 😄👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼 🐉✨❤

  • @PodcastItaliano
    @PodcastItaliano Před 3 lety +8

    Awesome as always!

  • @craighughes536
    @craighughes536 Před 3 lety +7

    Great costume Luke.. Great review of my local school students (it was filmed in my city of Glevum) ...

  • @leahbunny92
    @leahbunny92 Před 3 lety +2

    I have quite the obsession with Harry Potter, and this was a very interesting and informative video to watch. Thank you!

  • @aerolchristopherinfante
    @aerolchristopherinfante Před 3 lety +2

    I was just wondering this, and yet here you are.

  • @danyf.1442
    @danyf.1442 Před 3 lety +5

    The Hermione Granger in me couldn't be happier for this video! Sectumsempra is my favorite sounding spell, it is pretty straightforward and the meaning easy to guess as well, even if it is not proper latin ☺

  • @P.Paramo
    @P.Paramo Před rokem +1

    When I listen to your videos, you remind me of a Spanish professor I had who was an Augustine friar. He was a polyglot who spoke Spanish, English, French, Italian, Latin and Greek. I can attest his Spanish was even more elegant and beautiful than any other person from Spain, and his English was absolutely perfect. He sounded like a lord out of Kensington Palace (with a title bit of a Zorro accent.) I am still curious to know how fluent he was in the other languages he spoke, but he passed away a while ago. Anyway, native speakers of Italian and French said he sounded like a native from Southern France (in French) and La Toscana (in Italian.) I had not met anybody from Greece by that time, and nobody spoke Latin anymore, So, no way to know how good he was in those languages. But we all could assume he was pretty good too. In any case, he used to say the first mass of the day at 5:00 am in Latin (just because he liked it), and people used to attend only because everything sounded absolutely beautiful.

  • @stscallop3254
    @stscallop3254 Před 3 lety +6

    I love these videos.

  • @ItsMeAnn628
    @ItsMeAnn628 Před 2 lety

    What a fun video! I’ll have to check out your other movie Latin episodes!

  • @robertotamagnini4891
    @robertotamagnini4891 Před rokem +1

    I did classical secondary school , studied latin and ancient greek - and I really enjoyed your lesson ! gratias tibi ! ( thankyou ! ) Grazie ! 🙂

  • @cellohoch
    @cellohoch Před 3 lety +3

    I grew up with Harry Potter franchise, starting with the movies, going deeper with the books. This made-up Latinised spells really fascinated me to the point of going to study Latin and Ancient Greek by myself as a hobby, which gave me a rich perspective on my native language (Portuguese). I don’t know if the author had this aim at first but it turned out this way for me, this Dog Latin served to me as a door to new knowledge.

  • @LuisSantos-us1ww
    @LuisSantos-us1ww Před 3 lety +3

    Thank you for the video. My students knew the expression "Expecto Patronum" from the Harry Potter movie. That was the only expression that they knew from Latin, beside "Et pluribus unum" that's the words for Benfica, a football portuguese team. Gratias tibi ago.

  • @giapwnezikh.omeleta
    @giapwnezikh.omeleta Před 3 lety +2

    This video brought back really weird memories...I used to have a proffessor in latin, in university, who loved Harry Potter. So, in the final exams the test, which was supposed to be a small passage that we had to translate from latin to greek and vice versa, was a chapter from Harry Potter and the philosopher's stone (Harrius Potter et philosophie lapis)...Dark days, those were dark days...

  • @elissa.dellaera
    @elissa.dellaera Před 2 lety +1

    YESS!!!!!! I've always wondered this!

  • @Baccatube79
    @Baccatube79 Před 3 lety +10

    Actually, "vertere", or better, "verti" in the mediopassive mood, in the meaning of "to change shape, to transfigure", has a certain poetic tradition. "Vertere, vertere/Formose Proteu" is found in the Enthusiasms of Iacobus Balde (Ode 39). Not classical, I know, still it IS possible, and I am pretty sure that Balde himself picked up that line somewhere.

  • @ancientromewithamy
    @ancientromewithamy Před rokem +1

    Fun. It did weird me out sometimes. I shared this video with my old philosophy professor, who taught a philosophy class inspired by the series years ago, though, haha. Good stuff.

  • @carlavlund5841
    @carlavlund5841 Před 3 lety +2

    Even if it was for just a brief fraction of a second, it made me happy to hear you just mentioning the word “conlang”. Have you ever delved into the world of conlanging at all?
    Great video as always, and as we say in conlanging: Fiat Lingua!

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před 3 lety +1

      I have; I mostly spend my time on natural languages though.

  • @Tubomiro
    @Tubomiro Před 3 lety +5

    3:57 loved those facial expressions Lol 😂.

  • @paulstewart1557
    @paulstewart1557 Před rokem +1

    I loved you almost gagging on the expelliarmus spell ... priceless!

  • @sunnydivino
    @sunnydivino Před 3 lety

    OMG!i started re watching the movies and I started with the books for the first time a couple weeks ago and now this 😍

  • @danielapazvillalobos4446
    @danielapazvillalobos4446 Před 3 lety +1

    Buenísimo, no sólo por la temática, también por tus gestos! 🤣🤣🤣

  • @NH-rn3wz
    @NH-rn3wz Před 3 lety +1

    As always Mr. Luke Sir a funny and informative video

  • @SantiYounger
    @SantiYounger Před 3 lety +1

    Another epic video. Being a huge Harry Potter fan I always thought lumus was correct Latin, Lumen it is, thanks hahah

  • @JoulesPerRadian
    @JoulesPerRadian Před 2 lety

    Oh my god. Thank you so much for the "monk's reward" at the end. 🤣🤣🤣

  • @Remy-lv5il
    @Remy-lv5il Před 3 lety +4

    Going out on a limb: expecto patronum could mean waiting for your patron (patronus - the animal that saves you from the dementors)

  • @jorgencaceres7945
    @jorgencaceres7945 Před 3 lety +1

    It is so interesting how our demeanour changes when we switch languages - I know I sound and even look different when I speak Italian or Spanish than when I speak English or Swedish, for example. But even the voice changes, and Luke is showing it very clearly - you get a totally different voice when you speak Latin! :D
    That said, to be nerdy: the words for the spells aren't really necessary. They're just a sort of crutch, to "verbalise" the spell and to enhance the intended effect of the spell. Same thing with the wand: it wouldn't really be necessary but is a good thing to have when you want to focus the force of the spell. A good sorcerer would be able to do stuff by just "looking at it" :) So therefore, the words have during the years become garbled while having been handed down by more or less thorough teachers. :)
    And it looks good on film :D
    Arvëdse 'n autra vota! :D

  • @mothersmilkltd4329
    @mothersmilkltd4329 Před 3 lety +1

    Gran canal. Y con un poco de Mozart para aderezarlo. Gracias por tu trabajo y buena suerte.

  • @SuAva
    @SuAva Před 3 lety +1

    That was fun!

  • @yutgorpotungyun
    @yutgorpotungyun Před 3 lety +2

    🤩finally!

  • @dimitradimitra5649
    @dimitradimitra5649 Před 3 lety +1

    I love this video!!!!!!!

  • @DukeCyrus
    @DukeCyrus Před 3 lety

    I still like that they do take inspiration at the very least

  • @JohnFallot
    @JohnFallot Před 3 lety +3

    Speaking of films & franchises: a dive into film soundtracks that use Latin would be fascinating. I know that “Kingdom of Heaven” (2005) employs a bit of Latin = e.g. Burning the Past is a choir singing: ‘Ave regina caelorum/ ave domina angelorum/ salve radix salve porta/ ex qua mundo lux est orta.’

  • @lol101lol101lol10199
    @lol101lol101lol10199 Před 3 lety +3

    Feeling weak? Hold on, I'll cast a spell to wake you up and make you energized...
    *waves wand*
    "Enervate!!"

  • @eldricgrubbidge6465
    @eldricgrubbidge6465 Před 3 lety +3

    You should do all the Latin in Terry pratchett some time. Like the legal terms in the wee free men or the motto of the city watch.

  • @He_Who_Shapes
    @He_Who_Shapes Před 2 lety +1

    Magic spells always have been one of the most exciting and mysterious topics in HP world! Really great video, with cool examples of the spells & brilliant explanations. Yet some of the spells remained unexplained :( In particular, I`ve been always wondering what is the meaning of the spell, used by Gilderoy Lockhart (The Chamber of Secrets), when he tried to cure Harry`s hand after the quidditch match. One of my favourite scenes!

  • @marodrey
    @marodrey Před 3 lety +2

    HAHAHAHAHAHA ! It never occurred to me that the HP series had any Latin in them! But thank you a million times. It really sounds funny!

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks for watching, Mani!

    • @marodrey
      @marodrey Před 3 lety

      @@polyMATHY_Luke Thank YOU!!! Tremendous effort!

  • @shellyharry8189
    @shellyharry8189 Před 3 lety +2

    Excellent video! May I offer another explanation for using Latin in magical spells? Nowadays, Latin is still used in medicine, law and religion, three areas where the lingo can be intimidating or confusing to an outsider. Additionally, practitioners in these areas are typically well educated. If you're going to cast a spell, wouldn't the spell caster be someone from one of these backgrounds, people who in their everyday jobs already use a secret language? (I'm a nurse, but I swear I've never intentionally cast a spell 😉). I enjoy your videos! They're extremely well researched and enjoyable to watch!

  • @WeedMIC
    @WeedMIC Před 3 lety +1

    Brilliant!

  • @benavraham4397
    @benavraham4397 Před 3 lety +1

    Great music!

  • @rationaltrekker2509
    @rationaltrekker2509 Před 3 lety +1

    When I first encountered the patronus concept in HP, I immediately thought of the ancient concept of patron deity, which was modified in Xianity to apply to patron saints - protectors of sort, which is what a patronus in HP is - a protector of sorts. To me, the expecto patronum spells in HP is the one that rings most true as not only a Latin language phrase, but something conceptually authentic to an older world, which the wizarding world is supposed to be more closely tied to than the modern Muggle world.

  • @MrHermes3331
    @MrHermes3331 Před 3 lety +4

    I am going to expect these videos every week 😂 your sense of humor gives me life

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před 3 lety +1

      Haha thanks! I actually didn't put a lot of jokes into this one; I just did my best to veil my condescension towards the "bad" "Latin" of the series. 😂 Hopefully that was sufficiently risible.

  • @TheLaur1995
    @TheLaur1995 Před 2 lety

    I would love to see a video just like this but with Supernatural spells instead!!! Love your content!

  • @user-zb8dh2qx2t
    @user-zb8dh2qx2t Před rokem +1

    Just fell in love with this amazing guy!you are a living motivation to go on with latin...

  • @neopoulpa
    @neopoulpa Před 3 lety +3

    Η μεγαλύτερη μαγεία είναι η γλωσσοπλασία.
    Τhanks for your videos, they are all great.

  • @zzjlgb
    @zzjlgb Před 3 lety +2

    Never thought of an occasion where Expecto Patronum fits perfectly like that...

  • @amyrabjork7468
    @amyrabjork7468 Před 3 lety +3

    Rowlings classics degree influenced the plot more than the correctness of the "latin" in Harry Potter. Still the mythological references were the ones that got me interested in Roman mythology that eventually ended up in my current obsession with actual latin.
    Thanks for the video! Brilliant as always.

  • @corrywhatever3516
    @corrywhatever3516 Před 3 lety +2

    I thought this was Pseudo Latin, and was told it was "Real" Latin. I didn't know enough to argue. Thanks for the clarity.

  • @VitorEmanuelOliver
    @VitorEmanuelOliver Před 3 lety +45

    It is not rePAro. It's REparo u.u XD

  • @Michail_Chatziasemidis
    @Michail_Chatziasemidis Před 3 lety +2

    6:20 That reminds of how spell names change in Final Fantasy and Kingdom Hearts games to be more powerful, e.g. Fire → Fira → Firaga, Blizzard → Blizzara → Blizzaga, Thunder → Thundara → Thundaga etc.

  • @Kolious_Thrace
    @Kolious_Thrace Před 3 lety +2

    Great video!!!
    Anyone knew that the spells in HP are in Latin but no one ever searched about it!
    You hear endings like -us -um and you’re sure that’s Latin😂😂😂
    Yeah, I think JKRowling said that she just used the very veryyyy basic from what she remembered form the Latin courses in school!
    All the others are just made-up for her magic world!
    She searched in Botanology texts for botanical terms and also, she studied the mythology of several countries to create all those magical creatures!
    I think she used two Greek terms as spells!
    Anàpneo / αναπνέω: to breath underwater
    Epíski / επισκευή: to repair something

  • @yrooxrksvi7142
    @yrooxrksvi7142 Před 3 lety

    It gets even more interesting when you check the spells used in the books and videogames.
    Carpe Retractum, Glacius, Avifors/Draconifors/Lapifors, Incendio, Diffindo, Expulso, Confringo, Protego, Depulso.

  • @annafirnen4815
    @annafirnen4815 Před 3 lety +1

    Watching your videos makes me realize how much Latin words we have today in my native language, Polish. And I don't mean only the obvious ones related to science. We call glasses "okulary", quite similar to "ocularia" if you ask me. Also we use the word "bestia" for a "beast".

  • @hobozero
    @hobozero Před 3 lety +1

    There's an interesting connection between glamor/grammar and magical spells. The English verb to spell (as in to write a word with the correct letters) is related to a spell (a magical incantation). Medieval English speakers seeing latin, or even the vernacular written down would have called it spelling for the same reasons that glamor got it's vampire meaning.

  • @mylesmccrea2314
    @mylesmccrea2314 Před 3 lety +13

    I definitely like the idea that J.K. Rowling intentionally referenced the subjunctive mood for spells. Like a hope or wish then becoming reality, which seems to reflect the concept of magic in both the franchise and the real world. Thanks for the video!

  • @MichaelPhillipsatGreyOwlStudio

    As I recall, the fantasy movie Dragonslayer (1982) used a lot of Latin. I always wondered if it was accurately pronounced. I caught one passage in particular in which the main character enchanted a spear: "Nunc, per Potestatem Hermeticum, ex flammis, ferrum sanguinarium!" There were many other examples of spells chanted in Latin though.

  • @SoulcatcherLucario
    @SoulcatcherLucario Před 2 lety +1

    0:28 "supercilium superelliosum" nice easter egg :3

  • @mechanomics2649
    @mechanomics2649 Před 3 lety +2

    It feels like Rowling lazily appropriating the language. I say this because there are other instances of this in HP.

  • @johannesaskehov
    @johannesaskehov Před 2 lety +1

    This was a very interesting and educational video. I'm actually impressed that the names were so close to Latin nonetheless. I would've expected the majority of them to have simply been made up.

  • @BryanCarthell
    @BryanCarthell Před 3 lety

    When I first saw expecto patronum, I figured it meant “I hope for a protector”. Referencing Spanish esperar to wait or to hope, but as you say, it’s all fun.

  • @bohbohbohwut
    @bohbohbohwut Před 2 lety

    I didn't know glamour comes from grammar! Thanks!

  • @undevicesimus19
    @undevicesimus19 Před 3 lety +5

    Hi, Luke. Thank you for this! Could you also do the examination on Netflix's Sabrina incantations? Many of them, surprisingly, are in Latin.
    *Edit: Many of them...

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před 3 lety +2

      I shall. The original Sabrina with Clarissa explains it all or the new one?

    • @undevicesimus19
      @undevicesimus19 Před 3 lety

      @@polyMATHY_Luke I have only watched the latest series. But other versions (if there are ones) seem interesting, too!

  • @ryanlafollette4819
    @ryanlafollette4819 Před 3 lety +1

    I'd love to see an examination of the Latin spells used in Charmed. I know some of them were definitely pretty off.

  • @Zapp4rn
    @Zapp4rn Před 2 lety +1

    EXPECT A PATREON!

  • @menotyou4289
    @menotyou4289 Před 3 lety +3

    I love that he's wearing academic robes for this ^_^

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před 3 lety +3

      Haha I found them while cleaning out my closet a week ago and I knew I had to do this video

    • @menotyou4289
      @menotyou4289 Před 3 lety +1

      @@polyMATHY_Luke wonderful! Where I'm from those look like Bachelor of Science robes. May I ask what they actually are? I'm oddly nerdy about regalia.

  • @Dr._Vita
    @Dr._Vita Před 2 lety +1

    I've just started working on a sort of conlang based off of Latin for my cats
    (Specifically my black cat who definitely looks like they could speak Hebrew or Latin if they were human)
    I call it emprum cattum which means cat empire.
    I only did this because I recently started learning Latin, got really interested, and then made the conlang.
    It doesn't sound exactly like Latin in some cases, and then a lot like Latin in others. (From what I know)
    I really like Latin and if I wasn't already learning Spanish so I can at least have a language on my plate, I would totally learn more!

  • @barrigudo00
    @barrigudo00 Před 3 lety +4

    A língua Latina tem esse peso de fascínio. Qualquer coisa em latim parece soar melhor.

    • @lllllllll3917
      @lllllllll3917 Před 3 lety

      Vc sabe me dizer como ficaria
      "Tudo isso vai acabar lógo"
      Em latin???

    • @lllllllll3917
      @lllllllll3917 Před 3 lety

      @@neroclaudius7573 Esquece éssa,
      Vc sabe me dizer como ficaria
      "No final de tudo,Isso realmente não importa" em latim?

  • @rebeccalongokura3575
    @rebeccalongokura3575 Před 2 lety

    this is cute! thanks!

  • @Devarunable
    @Devarunable Před 3 lety +3

    Lots of love for Latin 💖

  • @AlessioZocker
    @AlessioZocker Před 3 lety

    I think it's not "alarte" in 5:11 I instead understood him saying: "volate" so I guess it was intended to be derived from the latin word "volare" for to fly and therefore in context with "volate ascendere" to be meant as "to fly up/ hurl up" as we can see happining in the scene. So much about my explanation^^
    Huge fan, nice content as always, keep it up. I am looking forward for the next one :)

    • @polyMATHY_Luke
      @polyMATHY_Luke  Před 3 lety

      harrypotter.fandom.com/wiki/Alarte_Ascendare

    • @AlessioZocker
      @AlessioZocker Před 3 lety

      @@polyMATHY_Luke I guess u were right. I even put in the subtitles and indeed it says "alarte" however I can't help it to hear "volate" probably my biased mind there hahah :)

  • @SirBojo4
    @SirBojo4 Před 3 lety +1

    I reallus likus your videus. You got a new subcribus :D