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    Vul·gar Lat·in
    /ˈvəlɡər ˈlatn/

    noun

    • 1. informal Latin of classical times.

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  3. Vul­gar Latin was the Latin of the mid­dle class. It was the Latin of peo­ple with some, but lim­it­ed, school­ing: the mer­chants, arti­sans, low­er pub­lic offi­cials and army offi­cers, who were required to know how to read and write for prac­ti­cal pur­pos­es. The mid­dle class was influ­en­tial.

  4. Jun 11, 2018 · Vulgar Latin was the everyday Latin of the Roman Empire and, until the 19c, European VERNACULAR languages were referred to as vulgar tongues. Concomitantly, a sense of coarseness and lack of breeding and culture developed, associated with the ‘lowest orders’ of society, and now dominates, particularly with reference to language: a vulgar ...

  5. Vulgar Latin, or Common Latin, is one of the two types of Latin, an old language that was spoken by the Romans. Vulgar Latin is not spoken anymore, but its many dialects eventually became what are now Romance languages (such as Italian, Spanish, French, Portuguese and Romanian ). Vulgar Latin was spoken by the regular people ( vulgus in Latin ...

  6. Mar 26, 2023 · Vulgar Latin was the most common language in the Late Roman Republic and Roman Empire. The name derives from the Latin word vulgaris, which means "common." Also known as Popular Latin or ...

  7. Vulgar Latin definition: popular Latin, as distinguished from literary or standard Latin, especially those spoken forms of Latin from which the Romance languages developed.

  8. Where does the noun Vulgar Latin come from? The earliest known use of the noun Vulgar Latin is in the late 1500s. OED's earliest evidence for Vulgar Latin is from 1581, in the writing of William Fulke, theologian and college head. Vulgar Latin is formed within English, by compounding. Etymons: vulgar adj., Latin n.

  9. Dec 20, 2023 · Vulgar Latin was the everyday form of Latin that was spoken by the common people (the vulgus) of the Roman Empire. It was the language of soldiers, merchants, farmers, workers, rather than the language of scribes, poets, historians and politicians. As such, it differed somewhat from Classical (literary) Latin in vocabulary, pronunciation and ...

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