Who was the First Roman Emperor?
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- čas přidán 23. 01. 2024
- Actually, I think I did a pretty good job in the script of introducing the video, so I'll just copy and paste that:
Men think about the Roman Empire at least five times a day. Me personally, I think about it about once every minute, but that’s only because I’m currently recording a video about the Roman Empire. Well, technically, I’m currently writing the description for that video, but by the time you see this, I won’t be making a video about the Roman Empire anymore. The point is, what is the Roman Empire? When did it start-and when did it fall? Today I’ll be going over the first of those questions, in an attempt to answer-who was the first Roman Emperor?
one of my favorite things about being a woman is i can think of the roman empire as many times as i want in a day and no one will make up a statistic about it
Ok I love that you used the Roman names and also you get the Roman stamp of approval (we call this a triumph) this is absolutely correct
Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears, because mine got blown out when Caesar appeared
The stress on imperātor should be on the 3rd syllable, not the second. (In Classical Latin the penultimate syllable is stressed if it's long, otherwise the antepenultimate syllable is stressed. The ā is long so the penultimate syllable is long and thus it is stressed.)
3rd syllable? Where are you getting the extra syllable from a 2-syllable word?
My favorite Roman Emperor is Emperor Emperor Emperor.
The plottwist
The plottwist!
Wow, pretty late in the day to post your video-hopefully next week you won't upload at all! LOL!
How in the name of IVPITER do you have only have like 100 views on this? XDDDDDDD
Iovis* nam est "in nomine Iovis"
@@IkkezzUsedEmber Linguistical jokes on you! English doesn't declense nouns hence why it uses "of".
@@Rhosus yeah but if you wanna use the english does it this way card, english calls it Jove.
@@IkkezzUsedEmber except there is a difference between english having something and actually using it. Even when it does use the borrowing from a language that declenses, it still acts as if it was any other noun so it would once again be "of jove" for the sake of acting cool, and not making "of Jupiter" incorrect either.
Haec video me delectavit. Bene factvm, anglicvlvs.