lyorn: (Default)
[personal profile] lyorn
I'll get the new car Friday next week, and it will be just like the old car, only newer and with a slightly stronger engine. In fact, the new car is so similar to the old one that I'm thinking about naming her "The second blue one". Anyone know enough Latin to translate? Caerulea Secunda? Is there a better Latin word for "blue"?

I'll get my tooth fixed next Tuesday.

Some links:

Explaining quantum mechanics to a dog (via Making Light)
Yesterday's futures
Og the Caveperson reviews "300" and "Troy"
The Grammar of Cat Macros

Blue in Latin

Date: 2007-05-13 04:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mad-freddy.livejournal.com
Caerul(e)a secunda (the "e" is optional in this word) might be the best way to put it - my Stowasser tells me that caerul(e)us means a number of things: "himmelblau, wasserblau, meerblau, dunkelblau, blaugruen, blauschwarz, dunkel" with references to who used it how (people like Ovid, Horaz et al.).
You could also use the word "glaucus" (--> Glauca secunda), which means mainly "blaugrau" and is a latin version of the greek word "glaukos", which means "blaeulich", but also "funkelnd". There's even the word "glaukophtalmos", which means "blauaeugig", to have blue eyes. The word "glaukopis", which is derived from glaukophtalmos, was used as a special name (als Beiname) for the goddess Athena and the canon translation to German would be "mit funkelnden Augen".
So, there you have it, hope it helps a bit :-) - and sorry for the language mix, everyone.

Profile

lyorn: (Default)
lyorn

July 2025

S M T W T F S
  12 345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags