John Rallo
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Were they speaking Italian or were they speaking Latin? They would have been speaking Latin back then. Okay, but here's the question, the reason why I ask this.
Were they speaking Italian or were they speaking Latin? They would have been speaking Latin back then. Okay, but here's the question, the reason why I ask this.
Were they speaking Italian or were they speaking Latin? They would have been speaking Latin back then. Okay, but here's the question, the reason why I ask this.
When Martin Luther was translating the Bible in the 1500s or the 1400s, whenever that was, the reason why the Bible was, the priests would be the only one that could tell you the Word of God, because they're the only one that could read Latin. So no one spoke Latin, no one read Latin. They couldn't read it.
When Martin Luther was translating the Bible in the 1500s or the 1400s, whenever that was, the reason why the Bible was, the priests would be the only one that could tell you the Word of God, because they're the only one that could read Latin. So no one spoke Latin, no one read Latin. They couldn't read it.
When Martin Luther was translating the Bible in the 1500s or the 1400s, whenever that was, the reason why the Bible was, the priests would be the only one that could tell you the Word of God, because they're the only one that could read Latin. So no one spoke Latin, no one read Latin. They couldn't read it.
So these people didn't know what was in the Bible until Martin Luther, he translated it into phonetic languages. I think German and a couple other languages it got eventually translated to. So then people could read the Bible for themselves, whereas before it was just Latin. So when did Latin die off? When did they stop using Latin? Because Latin's a weird one.
So these people didn't know what was in the Bible until Martin Luther, he translated it into phonetic languages. I think German and a couple other languages it got eventually translated to. So then people could read the Bible for themselves, whereas before it was just Latin. So when did Latin die off? When did they stop using Latin? Because Latin's a weird one.
So these people didn't know what was in the Bible until Martin Luther, he translated it into phonetic languages. I think German and a couple other languages it got eventually translated to. So then people could read the Bible for themselves, whereas before it was just Latin. So when did Latin die off? When did they stop using Latin? Because Latin's a weird one.
You learn it in school, but you're never going to fucking use it. They spoke Latin and Greek. Like, when did Latin go? Isn't it crazy? So the Roman Empire, they spoke a language that's dead. It's a dead language. Which is bananas.
You learn it in school, but you're never going to fucking use it. They spoke Latin and Greek. Like, when did Latin go? Isn't it crazy? So the Roman Empire, they spoke a language that's dead. It's a dead language. Which is bananas.
You learn it in school, but you're never going to fucking use it. They spoke Latin and Greek. Like, when did Latin go? Isn't it crazy? So the Roman Empire, they spoke a language that's dead. It's a dead language. Which is bananas.
Right. So there it is. After the fall of Rome in 476 A.D., Latin began to die out and distinct local Latin dialects developed. Wow. Wow. So these dialects eventually evolved to modern romance languages like Italian and Spanish, which is crazy. That means those languages are only 500 fucking years old. That's nuts.
Right. So there it is. After the fall of Rome in 476 A.D., Latin began to die out and distinct local Latin dialects developed. Wow. Wow. So these dialects eventually evolved to modern romance languages like Italian and Spanish, which is crazy. That means those languages are only 500 fucking years old. That's nuts.
Right. So there it is. After the fall of Rome in 476 A.D., Latin began to die out and distinct local Latin dialects developed. Wow. Wow. So these dialects eventually evolved to modern romance languages like Italian and Spanish, which is crazy. That means those languages are only 500 fucking years old. That's nuts.
Yeah. Of course. Yeah, of course. But isn't it crazy that those languages, like Italian, is only like 500 years old? Who the fuck would have guessed that?
Yeah. Of course. Yeah, of course. But isn't it crazy that those languages, like Italian, is only like 500 years old? Who the fuck would have guessed that?
Yeah. Of course. Yeah, of course. But isn't it crazy that those languages, like Italian, is only like 500 years old? Who the fuck would have guessed that?
Oh, yeah. They all... Texas is way bigger than all those places, which is nuts. When you look at America, it's basically like Europe, but we don't call it different countries. But Kentucky is so much different than Los Angeles.