Latin Moon

Latin Moon




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Latin Moon
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
" Latin Moon " is a song by the Canadian singer Mia Martina released on CP Records and was written by Adam Alexander, Ryan Kowarsky , Daniel Kowarsky , Alexander Vujic and Wassim Salibi (also known as Tony Sal, the founder of CP Records). A music video was released on August 4, 2011. It was directed by Marc Andrée Debruyne. The music video attracted 17 million views until December 2017.

After the success of the record, an alternative single was released featuring Massari , also a Canadian artist signed to the label with an amended music video released on December 13, 2011 months after the release of the original. The version has attracted almost 16 million views till December 2017.


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Here is a list of phases that we distinguish in English (taken from here ):
Does Latin distinguish the same phases of the moon? If so, I'd love a comprehensive list of words (and examples!) that Romans (or later astronomers) would use.
This question makes me recall my childhood. I see two approaches to an answer: 1. there is a complete list from a XVII century author, and 2. a compilation of classical and post-classical names by L&S.
According to the Harmonia Macrocosmica by Andreas Cellarius (XVII century,) the phases are:
The intermediate ones, in turn, may be crescens (🌓 waxing) and decrescens (🌗 waning; remember Carmina Burana/O Fortuna?) He even goes to name the phase for every single day of the lunar cicle (larger image here .) Note that in English crescent refers to the shape (🌒), while in Latin crescens means growing (i.e. waxing)
Novilunium and plenilunium are postclassical, and according to L&S, classical names were luna nova and luna plena .
Luna entry in L&S lists crescens and decrescens , as well as instances of dimidiata (by Cato,) extrema and prima (by Varro) and specific days as counted from the last New Moon (e.g. quinta decima luna , Columella, Res Rustica , 2, 10 ),
I should think that all of these have names in Latin. From my reading I recall only a passage in Pliny, Nat. 16.190, where he says that the time of conjunction (true new moon) has three names: coitus, dies interlunii and dies silentis lunae.
inter omnes vero convenit utilissime in coitu eius sterni, quem diem
alii interlunii, alii silentis lunae appellant.
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