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18:26
How do people here feel about humorous or clickbaity question titles? It's not easy to keep all my titles formal.
 
2 hours later…
20:12
Joonas, please go ahead with the merging /re: latin.stackexchange.com/questions/4741/…
I'm not sure to make an answer out of these for three reasons: 1) it wouldn't be my first rushed, poor quality answer to be outperformed by some better informed, slower respondent, 2) I'm kind of stealing from my working hours, 3) the question is still not properly answered.
@JoonasIlmavirta (forgot to tag in the first place)
@Rafael Understandable!
All comments together are too long to fit into one comment, by the way.
@Rafael I combined (and slightly edited) the comments into two longer comments.
@Cerberus True. I hope the current two-comment version is sensible.
@Rafael Totally understandable! It's not bad to post a mediocre answer if you think others are likely to do better. It's still helpful. And I know I've posted numerous less than perfect answers.
But it's up to you, of course.
Rule of thumb: If no one has given an answer explaining what you want to explain, answering is a good idea, even if it doesn't constitute a full answer.
@blagae Hi!
20:29
hi all
I'd like to take this speaking opportunity to put a curse on the inventor of JavaScript
@blagae What for?
I imagine you'll have to curse a whole lot of people.
wonders how to curse someone in Latin
I'm used to back-ends, where objects stay in their own threads and there's no asynchronicity hell and you don't need a browser to debug anything
but when writing a website, I suppose there's no real way around it
Veneficius is a useful word. Also maledictio
not sure how historical this is: youtube.com/watch?v=Az4P2EXH5x4
@blagae Not that I understand much about it, but sounds likely.
20:34
Or you can just extrapolate a near-universal 4-letter word, with less of a mystical meaning: meretrix!
@Rafael Hmm... I was actually thinking more in terms of syntax and structure: How does one even construct a curse?
But I'm short on vocabulary, too.
I assume there's something idiomatic to the effect of "please take this offering and kill that other guy".
@JoonasIlmavirta just from intuition: maledictus sit nn
@Rafael That would work. And also more directly: maledico NN.
Vae te!
@JoonasIlmavirta dii immortales maledicant eum?
20:36
I wonder if there's a corpus of extant curses from antiquity.
@Cerberus or is it vae tibi? I think I recall vae vobis
It seems the accusative is rare.
@Rafael I'm not sure if the gods or the one asking for the curse should be maledictifying other people. I really don't know.
I actually think I've seen the dative more often, too.
lots of general info on en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curse_tablet
but you'll have to resort to the references to find any source texts
20:41
Our site hasn't seen any curse questions yet, if my memory serves me well.
Rants excluded.
That'd be an avenue worth exploring here.
Dormitum eundum est. Valetote!
Regarding the planets, two thoughts: 1) a comet is a rare happening, like a couple of days every two years/not sure if we will find a reference for that. Anyway, cometa is Latin, but maybe a Medieval or Modern coining. 2) Asteroids are definitely late-XX-century (Ceres, Vesta, and others were first called planets)

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