Subject: Uses of a dead language
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Posted on: 2013-03-13 21:54:00 UTC

I had a very good Latin teacher at school, and went on to read Classics at Oxford (including compulsory Greek, yuck).

As for what I learned that's transferrable to writing English prose... Unlike modern languages, you're still taught the formal grammar and composition; I was able to use that framework to better understand English grammar and syntax. It's very important too to realise that languages change over time, and that rules that are correct in one context or register may be incorrect in another. I found the diachronic view of a thousand years and more very helpful in gaining that perspective. Finally, it was absolutely vital to realise that primers and style-guides are, at best, only providing guidelines: all the best authors regularly break the "rules", and learning how and when to do so successfully makes your writing so much more natural and flowing, and often more expressive. If you stick religiously to only the simple, straightforward constructions in your primer, you'll end up writing like a stilted primary-school teacher (or student!) regardless of the context.

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