Practice your Latin

Spoken Latin: What does “In Morbum Incidere” mean?

This article has been reviewed in accordance with our editorial policy.

The best way to learn Latin is to read and lis­ten to as much as pos­si­ble in Latin—as long as it is in line with the type of lit­er­a­ture you want to read. In this video, entire­ly in Latin, you’ll learn about the expres­sion in mor­bum incidere in a spo­ken Latin style based on attest­ed usage in Roman authors.

More video lessons in Latin: Loci et Locu­tiones

Video in Latin

Below is a video in which Daniel Pet­ters­son explains the Latin expres­sion “In mor­bum incidere” using exam­ples from Latin lit­er­a­ture: the video is whol­ly in Latin.

Latin audio

If you only want to lis­ten to the episode, you can lis­ten to it here on Latinitium.com or lis­ten in your pod­cast play­er on your smart­phone or tablet.

Daniel Pettersson

Daniel Pettersson

Teacher and author Daniel Pettersson, M.A., is co-founder of Latinitium and is currently teaching Latin at Stockholm University, where he is also working on his Ph.D. dissertation on Humanist Colloquia. Daniel believes in the importance of Latin literature in the modern world and that you can teach yourself Latin with the right motivation, method, and material.
Written by Daniel Pettersson

Written by Daniel Pettersson

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