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-   -   What does OBAMA spell backwards? (https://www.ablemuse.com/erato/showthread.php?t=3779)

Duncan Gillies MacLaurin 09-08-2008 07:04 AM

What does OBAMA spell backwards?

James Wilk 09-08-2008 10:15 AM

It spells "amabo," the Latin future active indicative, first person singular verb meaning "I will love."

Jim

Anne Bryant-Hamon 09-08-2008 11:43 AM

Neat - I like it. Thanks for posting this Duncan. My youngest daughter is taking her first Latin course this year and she also loves Obama. I will tell her about this when she comes in from school this afternoon.

Anne

Chris Childers 09-08-2008 11:49 AM

Awesome. It's going on my verb conjugation quiz two periods from now.

Marion Shore 09-08-2008 12:08 PM

Nomen est omen.

Robert J. Clawson 09-08-2008 02:58 PM

Originally posted by James Wilk:

It spells "amabo," the Latin future active indicative, first person singular verb meaning "I will love."

Jim


Jim, I'm sold old that I was taught to use shall with first person singular and plural.

These days a politician is more likely to say, "I'm gonna love, baby, love."

Shameless


Anne Bryant-Hamon 09-08-2008 04:00 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by Marion Shore:
Nomen est omen.
Marion,

Does this mean "Name is an Omen?"

If so, I agree. I think 'Barack' means something like "I will bless". I think, as Oprah said, "he's the one". http://www.ablemuse.com/erato/ubbhtml/smile.gif

Maybe I should take Latin.

Anne


Robert Meyer 09-08-2008 10:14 PM

Yeah, and there's the rumor that occasionally comes up on the TSE-List that he used his middle initial because "T. Eliot" is "toilet" backwards.


Robert Meyer

James Wilk 09-10-2008 08:04 AM

"The things which I have here promised, I will perform."

"If I can help in any way, I will be very happy to do so."

--Quotes from Elizabeth II

But what does she know about "The Queen's English"?


Shall has been going the way of thence and thither, whence and whither, hence and hither for a very, very long time.

Peter Chipman 09-11-2008 05:27 AM

On the first-person singular "shall" vs. "will"--the pedant's rule is that "I shall X" expresses confident expectation ("I shall be nineteen years old next Tuesday") and "I will X" expresses the speaker's intention ("I will marry you, Throckmorton"). So Elizabeth's usage is correct.

For second and third persons, the rule is reversed. ("You shall not pass!" vs. "When you get to the end of the street you will see a yellow house.")


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