BonsaiNut said:
Latin is pretty straight forward - there are significantly fewer ways to pronounce sounds than in English. Rules are absolute, there are no exceptions. For example, in Latin "c" is ALWAYS hard. So for all of you who pronounce percula as "per-CYU-la" or "per-CELL-a" you need to revise your thinking
The worst is crocea, which even I pronounce as "cro-SAY-uh" - it probably should be "cro-CAY-ah".
Where did we get these
absolute rules for pronunciation of classical Latin? Did someone discover a sound recording of Cicero's orations?
The truth is we do not know how Latin was pronounced 2000 years ago. We don't even know how English is supposed to be pronounced today. Just put an Australian, an American, an Oxford educated Englishman and a London cabbie in the same room and see how many different versions of English you will get. Throw in Dubya for good measure and you get an entirely new language that only Karl Rove understands.
In my opinion, the best way to pronounce scientific names should be the Italian, since that language is the most similar to Latin. In the case of Crocea, the correct Italian pronunciation should be "cro-CHAY-ah" instead of "cro-CAY-ah" or "cro-SAY-ah." The consonant C has different pronunciations, changing with the vowel that follows that letter. For example, Ceras is pronounced "cheras" (not "seras" or "keras") but Cadlina is pronounced "kadleena."
A few consonants that are pronounced differently in English are H, which is silent in Latin, and J, which is pronounced like the vowel sound "ee" in Latin. They didn't even have a J in classical Latin; Julius Caesar was really Iulius Caesar. For example, Hypselodoris should be pronounced "eepsehlohdoris" and Jorunna should be pronounced "eeohrunna."
The major problem is that English has so many different vowel sounds. Latin has only five: A "ah," E "eh," I "ee," O "oh," and U "oo."
It bugs me every time I hear Jupiter's innermost moon, Io, called "Eye-oh" instead of the correct "EE-oh."
Don't worry if you can't pronounce something in Latin, the doctors and lawyers can't either. Ever hear one of them say "bona fide" or "habeas corpus?" Ever hear a plant person say "Ficus benjamina?" Their pronunciations are not even close to Latin. Only the genus is correctly pronounced in "H0m0 sapiens."
It's nudi-brank, not nudi-branch, and the plural is spelled nudibranchs not nudibranches. It's from the Latin
nudibranchia.
