Vocative
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When we call someone by name in Latin, we use a form of the name called the "'''vocative case'''". Here are the basic rules for making a vocative: | When we call someone by name in Latin, we use a form of the name called the "'''vocative case'''". Here are the basic rules for making a vocative: |
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When we call someone by name in Latin, we use a form of the name called the "vocative case". Here are the basic rules for making a vocative:
- If a name ends in "-ius", then the vocative ends in "-i". "Tullius" becomes "Tulli".
- If a name ends in "-us", then the vocative ends in "-e". "Marcus" becomes "Marce".
- All other names do not change at all. "Cicero" stays "Cicero", "Livia" stays "Livia" and so on.
Usage in practice
It is a good idea in general to use the praenomen and nomen combination (the first two parts of the name):
- To say hello to Marcus Lucretius Agricola you would write "Salve, Marce Lucreti!".
- To say hello to Aulus Apollonius Cordus you would write "Salve, Aule Apolloni!".
- To say hello to Gaius Equitius Cato you would write "Salve, Gai Equiti!".
A more informal style is for friends to use the cognomen (the last part of the name):
- "Salve, Agricola!"
- "Salve, Corde!"
- "Salve, Cato!"
Only if you are family members or very, very close friends indeed with these people you could write:
- "Salve, Marce!""
- "Salve, Aule!"
- "Salve, Gai!"
There is a complete discussion of *which* name you should use at Using Roman names.
Algorithmically speaking...
This perl function will return the vocative form of a name.
sub makeVocative { my ($nomen) = @_; my @elements = split(/\s+/, $nomen); for (my $i=0; $i<=$#elements; $i++) { $elements[$i] =~ s/ius$/i/; $elements[$i] =~ s/us$/e/; $elements[$i] =~ s/IUS$/I/; $elements[$i] =~ s/US$/E/; } return join(' ', @elements); }