The Volokh Conspiracy
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"It Is Sort of a Monty Python-Latin"
"Crooked not courageous: Adani renames Australian group Bravus, mistaking it for 'brave,'" writes The Guardian (Naaman Zhou), quoted by Victor Mair (Language Log):
Mining company Adani has changed its name to a Latin word ["Bravus"] that means "crooked", "deformed", "mercenary or assassin", after mistakenly thinking that it meant "brave"….
Dr Christopher Bishop, from the Australian National University's centre of classical studies, said "bravus" did not mean "brave" in either classical or medieval Latin….
"It is sort of a Monty Python-Latin," he told Guardian Australia. "It is that classic joke where you chuck an '-us' on to the end of anything and call it Latin."
Bishop said the closest relative to "bravus" was the medieval Latin word "bravo" – a noun meaning a "mercenary", "assassin" or "sword for hire".
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He has a wife, you know...
I will not have my fwiends widiculed by the common sowdiewy!
Illegitimi non carborundum...
Well fuckus tremendus ridiculus!
Only one entity still speaks Latin, the church. Any legal utterance in Latin violates the Establishment Clause. It should be void.
So why do we shout "bravo" at actors?
We don’t. If I were impressed, I would shout “bravo” only at an (individual) actor. A group of actors would get “bravi”.
Pluralization issues aside, nobody seems to have a plausible answer to your underlying question. There was the ancient word bravium meaning “prize”, so maybe the word meant “prize-worthy” at some point. There is also prāvus, “bent”, which might be the origin of the sense of “mercenary” or “desperado”, and it somehow got turned around, like nice (which originally meant “ignorant”) and awful (which was a synonym of awesome for a long time).
So why do we shout “bravo” at actors?
< Italian bravo, superlative bravissimo most excellent.
Who said Latin is a dead language?
"Trumpus" has just become Latin for 'delusional loser.'
Who came up with this idea? Biggus Dickus?