User: Neqitan Subscribe to Neqitan pronunciations
User profile: information, words and pronunciations.
| Date | Word | Listen | Votes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2013-03-04 | officium foederatum vestigatorium [la] | 0 votes | |
| 2013-03-04 | publicae securitatis custos internationa [la] | 0 votes | |
| 2013-03-04 | Promoveatur ut amoveatur [la] | 0 votes | |
| 2013-03-04 | Principiis obsta [la] | 0 votes | |
| 2013-03-04 | plenum [la] | 0 votes | |
| 2013-03-04 | pro capite [la] | 0 votes | |
| 2013-03-04 | Summum ius summa iniuria [la] | 0 votes | |
| 2013-03-04 | explanandum [la] | 0 votes | |
| 2013-03-04 | liber maxime divenditus [la] | 0 votes | |
| 2013-03-04 | espécimen [es] | 0 votes | |
| 2013-03-04 | specimen [la] | 0 votes | |
| 2013-03-04 | tot [la] | 0 votes | |
| 2013-03-04 | In iure cesio hereditatis [la] | 0 votes | |
| 2013-03-04 | Toto corde [la] | 0 votes | |
| 2013-03-04 | Testamentum Holographum [la] | 0 votes | |
| 2013-03-04 | Filius ergo haeres [la] | 0 votes | |
| 2013-03-04 | Super partes [la] | 0 votes | |
| 2013-03-04 | Si vis amari ama [la] | 0 votes | |
| 2013-03-04 | Servum pecus [la] | 0 votes | |
| 2013-03-04 | referendum [la] | 0 votes | |
| 2013-03-04 | Sesquipedalia verba [la] | 0 votes | |
| 2013-03-04 | Sub lege libertas [la] | 0 votes | |
| 2013-03-04 | Sub condicione [la] | 0 votes | |
| 2013-03-04 | Solve et repete [la] | 0 votes | |
| 2013-03-04 | Sine cura [la] | 0 votes | |
| 2013-03-04 | Sine causa [la] | 0 votes | |
| 2013-03-04 | Sine ira et studio [la] | 0 votes | |
| 2013-03-04 | Similia similibus curantur [la] | 0 votes | |
| 2013-03-04 | Oportet ut scandala eveniant [la] | 0 votes | |
| 2013-03-04 | Sic vos non vobis [la] | 0 votes |
User's info
Hi! I'm a Spanish-speaker from the area of the capital city of El Salvador. I generally use a quite standard/formal pronunciation in my Spanish recordings, as opposed to a more regional, more informal pronunciation.
For my Latin recordings I use W. Sidney Allen's recommendations in "Vox Latina" according to his reconstruction of pronunciation ca. the 1st century BC. This means I pronounce words ending in vowel + m with nasalized vowels, my "v"s like English "w"s, I respect the distinction between short and long vowels, my short "e" and "o" are more open than my long "e" and "o", etc.

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