Ultimo martyrium ante actus sine honorum maybe, but that dedecus in mors prius quam dedecus comes from dedicatus and means dedicated with a strange prius that actually shows a position.
Now the cases become important.
mors nominative, vocative Who?" or "What?", How?
prius nominative singular "Who?" or "What?"
quam how/than
dedecus nominative, accusative, vocative "Who?" or "What?", Whom?, How?
What mors/death, Who prius/the first, quam how, dedecus defines how.
That means the First dies by dedication...
Latin was not founded by the Slave Masters and they never mastered it. Like in all modern languages they kept changing words and meanings. Knowledge is Power was the Roman Kraft durch Freude of the Germans.
Latin words are strictly root based, have a defining front syllable and declaring end case.
De deca re. Re root form. Deca rootword. De defining syllable.
The entire language was structured like that being the first artificially founded language by Greek merchants to communicate across the trade routes in clear and logic words. At some point they started using Arabic numbers. Hardly anyone was risen speaking Latin. The Antique was very different that the Germans teach always telling you that history and humans are not logic. Define logic here.
Then someone took Rome and declared themselves the Romans, founders of Latin and Imperal Slave Masters, just short of Pyramids and some time before being the Master Race and this happend:
Dedecus
(Latin) means disgrace, dishonor, shame, infamy, discredit, blemish, or vice, often referring to a shameful act or appearance, with synonyms in Latin including infamia, ignominia, turpitudo, and offensio
(Latin) means disgrace, dishonor, shame, infamy, discredit, blemish, or vice, often referring to a shameful act or appearance, with synonyms in Latin including infamia, ignominia, turpitudo, and offensio
of which one is not a logic variety of words being logically of that context sphere.
dedicare (to dedicate) focus on consecrating, declaring, or devoting something to a special use, including words like consecrare, devovere, dicare (proclaim), and verbs for specific applications like annuntiare (announce) or focusing on purpose like applicare (apply). Key concepts involve setting apart (de-dicare) for a sacred or serious use, like dedicating temples or book
#gfyALL
#noblessoblige
#cyberpunkcoltoure
