What does “enim et” mean?












7















A couple days ago, a friend sent me an excerpt from a new game, asking about a Latin phrase in it:




Contra Diabolus enim et alii Daemones




(In the game, this is the motto of a group of Catholic monster hunters—so it's meant to be Church Latin, not Classical.)



The translation seems fairly straightforward: "Against the Devil and other Demons". I would have used diabolum in the accusative, but that's a separate matter.



What confused me, though, was the word enim in the middle. I would normally translate enim as "for" or "because". So what's it doing here, right before et? Is it just an error on the translator's part, or is this a usage of enim I'm not familiar with?










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  • Enim follows its phrase; et precedes. Contra (Diabolum enim) (et alios Daemones)

    – Hugh
    yesterday











  • I keep seeing this in HNQ and reading it as 'What does "eminem" mean?'

    – David Richerby
    yesterday
















7















A couple days ago, a friend sent me an excerpt from a new game, asking about a Latin phrase in it:




Contra Diabolus enim et alii Daemones




(In the game, this is the motto of a group of Catholic monster hunters—so it's meant to be Church Latin, not Classical.)



The translation seems fairly straightforward: "Against the Devil and other Demons". I would have used diabolum in the accusative, but that's a separate matter.



What confused me, though, was the word enim in the middle. I would normally translate enim as "for" or "because". So what's it doing here, right before et? Is it just an error on the translator's part, or is this a usage of enim I'm not familiar with?










share|improve this question























  • Enim follows its phrase; et precedes. Contra (Diabolum enim) (et alios Daemones)

    – Hugh
    yesterday











  • I keep seeing this in HNQ and reading it as 'What does "eminem" mean?'

    – David Richerby
    yesterday














7












7








7








A couple days ago, a friend sent me an excerpt from a new game, asking about a Latin phrase in it:




Contra Diabolus enim et alii Daemones




(In the game, this is the motto of a group of Catholic monster hunters—so it's meant to be Church Latin, not Classical.)



The translation seems fairly straightforward: "Against the Devil and other Demons". I would have used diabolum in the accusative, but that's a separate matter.



What confused me, though, was the word enim in the middle. I would normally translate enim as "for" or "because". So what's it doing here, right before et? Is it just an error on the translator's part, or is this a usage of enim I'm not familiar with?










share|improve this question














A couple days ago, a friend sent me an excerpt from a new game, asking about a Latin phrase in it:




Contra Diabolus enim et alii Daemones




(In the game, this is the motto of a group of Catholic monster hunters—so it's meant to be Church Latin, not Classical.)



The translation seems fairly straightforward: "Against the Devil and other Demons". I would have used diabolum in the accusative, but that's a separate matter.



What confused me, though, was the word enim in the middle. I would normally translate enim as "for" or "because". So what's it doing here, right before et? Is it just an error on the translator's part, or is this a usage of enim I'm not familiar with?







motto grammar-identification ecclesiastical-latin






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asked yesterday









DraconisDraconis

18.3k22475




18.3k22475













  • Enim follows its phrase; et precedes. Contra (Diabolum enim) (et alios Daemones)

    – Hugh
    yesterday











  • I keep seeing this in HNQ and reading it as 'What does "eminem" mean?'

    – David Richerby
    yesterday



















  • Enim follows its phrase; et precedes. Contra (Diabolum enim) (et alios Daemones)

    – Hugh
    yesterday











  • I keep seeing this in HNQ and reading it as 'What does "eminem" mean?'

    – David Richerby
    yesterday

















Enim follows its phrase; et precedes. Contra (Diabolum enim) (et alios Daemones)

– Hugh
yesterday





Enim follows its phrase; et precedes. Contra (Diabolum enim) (et alios Daemones)

– Hugh
yesterday













I keep seeing this in HNQ and reading it as 'What does "eminem" mean?'

– David Richerby
yesterday





I keep seeing this in HNQ and reading it as 'What does "eminem" mean?'

– David Richerby
yesterday










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















16














A quick web search shows that the phrase 'Diabolus enim et alii Daemones' (without the contra) appears to originate from the Fourth Council of the Lateran (1215). The full sentence is Diabolus enim et alii daemones a Deo quidem natura creati sunt boni, sed ipsi per se facti sunt mali, which I would translate as something like, 'For the Devil and other demons were created by God (to be) good by nature, it's true, but they became, on their own, through their own agency, wicked.'



I suspect that whoever created the phrase for the game knew of this sentence, knew that contra means 'against', but didn't know that it requires a change of case or that enim doesn't really belong unless it's serving a connecting function; therefore, he or she just stuck contra at the beginning instead of changing to contra Diabolum et alios daemones.






share|improve this answer


























  • Excellent! I think this is the right answer—am I correct in translating that sentence as "for the Devil and other demons, created by God, are indeed good by nature, but their deeds in and of themselves are evil"? I'm never sure when translating Church Latin if I'm missing some crucial nuance.

    – Draconis
    yesterday











  • @Draconis, I updated the answer with my attempt at a translation – admittedly, a somewhat heavy-handed one.

    – cnread
    yesterday





















5














I would indeed expect the accusatives Diabolum and alios together with contra.
But there is a way to make the nominative work; then contra has to be read as an adverb, not a preposition (which would require accusative).
Ignoring the enim, the whole phrase could be read as "in front [of us are] the Devil and other Demons".



To make sense of enim, I think it modifies the entire motto, not just the second part.
It usually comes as the second word, but if the first two words are closely connected, it can come a little later.
This tight connection would make sense for me if contra was used as a preposition, but not so much in the adverbial use.
I find the position a little odd but not completely wrong.



As Lewis and Short write, enim is a corroborative particle.
An apt English counterpart here might be "indeed".
Therefore I would read the whole as:




In front [of us are] indeed the Devil and other Demons




However, this does feel a little odd.
Enim is in a weird place (and not even necessary in my opinion), and the use of contra strikes me as weird too.
The motto may well be a well-composed Latin motto, but it could also be a mistaken attempt at translating "Against the Devil and other Demons".






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    2 Answers
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    2 Answers
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    active

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    16














    A quick web search shows that the phrase 'Diabolus enim et alii Daemones' (without the contra) appears to originate from the Fourth Council of the Lateran (1215). The full sentence is Diabolus enim et alii daemones a Deo quidem natura creati sunt boni, sed ipsi per se facti sunt mali, which I would translate as something like, 'For the Devil and other demons were created by God (to be) good by nature, it's true, but they became, on their own, through their own agency, wicked.'



    I suspect that whoever created the phrase for the game knew of this sentence, knew that contra means 'against', but didn't know that it requires a change of case or that enim doesn't really belong unless it's serving a connecting function; therefore, he or she just stuck contra at the beginning instead of changing to contra Diabolum et alios daemones.






    share|improve this answer


























    • Excellent! I think this is the right answer—am I correct in translating that sentence as "for the Devil and other demons, created by God, are indeed good by nature, but their deeds in and of themselves are evil"? I'm never sure when translating Church Latin if I'm missing some crucial nuance.

      – Draconis
      yesterday











    • @Draconis, I updated the answer with my attempt at a translation – admittedly, a somewhat heavy-handed one.

      – cnread
      yesterday


















    16














    A quick web search shows that the phrase 'Diabolus enim et alii Daemones' (without the contra) appears to originate from the Fourth Council of the Lateran (1215). The full sentence is Diabolus enim et alii daemones a Deo quidem natura creati sunt boni, sed ipsi per se facti sunt mali, which I would translate as something like, 'For the Devil and other demons were created by God (to be) good by nature, it's true, but they became, on their own, through their own agency, wicked.'



    I suspect that whoever created the phrase for the game knew of this sentence, knew that contra means 'against', but didn't know that it requires a change of case or that enim doesn't really belong unless it's serving a connecting function; therefore, he or she just stuck contra at the beginning instead of changing to contra Diabolum et alios daemones.






    share|improve this answer


























    • Excellent! I think this is the right answer—am I correct in translating that sentence as "for the Devil and other demons, created by God, are indeed good by nature, but their deeds in and of themselves are evil"? I'm never sure when translating Church Latin if I'm missing some crucial nuance.

      – Draconis
      yesterday











    • @Draconis, I updated the answer with my attempt at a translation – admittedly, a somewhat heavy-handed one.

      – cnread
      yesterday
















    16












    16








    16







    A quick web search shows that the phrase 'Diabolus enim et alii Daemones' (without the contra) appears to originate from the Fourth Council of the Lateran (1215). The full sentence is Diabolus enim et alii daemones a Deo quidem natura creati sunt boni, sed ipsi per se facti sunt mali, which I would translate as something like, 'For the Devil and other demons were created by God (to be) good by nature, it's true, but they became, on their own, through their own agency, wicked.'



    I suspect that whoever created the phrase for the game knew of this sentence, knew that contra means 'against', but didn't know that it requires a change of case or that enim doesn't really belong unless it's serving a connecting function; therefore, he or she just stuck contra at the beginning instead of changing to contra Diabolum et alios daemones.






    share|improve this answer















    A quick web search shows that the phrase 'Diabolus enim et alii Daemones' (without the contra) appears to originate from the Fourth Council of the Lateran (1215). The full sentence is Diabolus enim et alii daemones a Deo quidem natura creati sunt boni, sed ipsi per se facti sunt mali, which I would translate as something like, 'For the Devil and other demons were created by God (to be) good by nature, it's true, but they became, on their own, through their own agency, wicked.'



    I suspect that whoever created the phrase for the game knew of this sentence, knew that contra means 'against', but didn't know that it requires a change of case or that enim doesn't really belong unless it's serving a connecting function; therefore, he or she just stuck contra at the beginning instead of changing to contra Diabolum et alios daemones.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited yesterday

























    answered yesterday









    cnreadcnread

    9,15211125




    9,15211125













    • Excellent! I think this is the right answer—am I correct in translating that sentence as "for the Devil and other demons, created by God, are indeed good by nature, but their deeds in and of themselves are evil"? I'm never sure when translating Church Latin if I'm missing some crucial nuance.

      – Draconis
      yesterday











    • @Draconis, I updated the answer with my attempt at a translation – admittedly, a somewhat heavy-handed one.

      – cnread
      yesterday





















    • Excellent! I think this is the right answer—am I correct in translating that sentence as "for the Devil and other demons, created by God, are indeed good by nature, but their deeds in and of themselves are evil"? I'm never sure when translating Church Latin if I'm missing some crucial nuance.

      – Draconis
      yesterday











    • @Draconis, I updated the answer with my attempt at a translation – admittedly, a somewhat heavy-handed one.

      – cnread
      yesterday



















    Excellent! I think this is the right answer—am I correct in translating that sentence as "for the Devil and other demons, created by God, are indeed good by nature, but their deeds in and of themselves are evil"? I'm never sure when translating Church Latin if I'm missing some crucial nuance.

    – Draconis
    yesterday





    Excellent! I think this is the right answer—am I correct in translating that sentence as "for the Devil and other demons, created by God, are indeed good by nature, but their deeds in and of themselves are evil"? I'm never sure when translating Church Latin if I'm missing some crucial nuance.

    – Draconis
    yesterday













    @Draconis, I updated the answer with my attempt at a translation – admittedly, a somewhat heavy-handed one.

    – cnread
    yesterday







    @Draconis, I updated the answer with my attempt at a translation – admittedly, a somewhat heavy-handed one.

    – cnread
    yesterday













    5














    I would indeed expect the accusatives Diabolum and alios together with contra.
    But there is a way to make the nominative work; then contra has to be read as an adverb, not a preposition (which would require accusative).
    Ignoring the enim, the whole phrase could be read as "in front [of us are] the Devil and other Demons".



    To make sense of enim, I think it modifies the entire motto, not just the second part.
    It usually comes as the second word, but if the first two words are closely connected, it can come a little later.
    This tight connection would make sense for me if contra was used as a preposition, but not so much in the adverbial use.
    I find the position a little odd but not completely wrong.



    As Lewis and Short write, enim is a corroborative particle.
    An apt English counterpart here might be "indeed".
    Therefore I would read the whole as:




    In front [of us are] indeed the Devil and other Demons




    However, this does feel a little odd.
    Enim is in a weird place (and not even necessary in my opinion), and the use of contra strikes me as weird too.
    The motto may well be a well-composed Latin motto, but it could also be a mistaken attempt at translating "Against the Devil and other Demons".






    share|improve this answer






























      5














      I would indeed expect the accusatives Diabolum and alios together with contra.
      But there is a way to make the nominative work; then contra has to be read as an adverb, not a preposition (which would require accusative).
      Ignoring the enim, the whole phrase could be read as "in front [of us are] the Devil and other Demons".



      To make sense of enim, I think it modifies the entire motto, not just the second part.
      It usually comes as the second word, but if the first two words are closely connected, it can come a little later.
      This tight connection would make sense for me if contra was used as a preposition, but not so much in the adverbial use.
      I find the position a little odd but not completely wrong.



      As Lewis and Short write, enim is a corroborative particle.
      An apt English counterpart here might be "indeed".
      Therefore I would read the whole as:




      In front [of us are] indeed the Devil and other Demons




      However, this does feel a little odd.
      Enim is in a weird place (and not even necessary in my opinion), and the use of contra strikes me as weird too.
      The motto may well be a well-composed Latin motto, but it could also be a mistaken attempt at translating "Against the Devil and other Demons".






      share|improve this answer




























        5












        5








        5







        I would indeed expect the accusatives Diabolum and alios together with contra.
        But there is a way to make the nominative work; then contra has to be read as an adverb, not a preposition (which would require accusative).
        Ignoring the enim, the whole phrase could be read as "in front [of us are] the Devil and other Demons".



        To make sense of enim, I think it modifies the entire motto, not just the second part.
        It usually comes as the second word, but if the first two words are closely connected, it can come a little later.
        This tight connection would make sense for me if contra was used as a preposition, but not so much in the adverbial use.
        I find the position a little odd but not completely wrong.



        As Lewis and Short write, enim is a corroborative particle.
        An apt English counterpart here might be "indeed".
        Therefore I would read the whole as:




        In front [of us are] indeed the Devil and other Demons




        However, this does feel a little odd.
        Enim is in a weird place (and not even necessary in my opinion), and the use of contra strikes me as weird too.
        The motto may well be a well-composed Latin motto, but it could also be a mistaken attempt at translating "Against the Devil and other Demons".






        share|improve this answer















        I would indeed expect the accusatives Diabolum and alios together with contra.
        But there is a way to make the nominative work; then contra has to be read as an adverb, not a preposition (which would require accusative).
        Ignoring the enim, the whole phrase could be read as "in front [of us are] the Devil and other Demons".



        To make sense of enim, I think it modifies the entire motto, not just the second part.
        It usually comes as the second word, but if the first two words are closely connected, it can come a little later.
        This tight connection would make sense for me if contra was used as a preposition, but not so much in the adverbial use.
        I find the position a little odd but not completely wrong.



        As Lewis and Short write, enim is a corroborative particle.
        An apt English counterpart here might be "indeed".
        Therefore I would read the whole as:




        In front [of us are] indeed the Devil and other Demons




        However, this does feel a little odd.
        Enim is in a weird place (and not even necessary in my opinion), and the use of contra strikes me as weird too.
        The motto may well be a well-composed Latin motto, but it could also be a mistaken attempt at translating "Against the Devil and other Demons".







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited yesterday

























        answered yesterday









        Joonas IlmavirtaJoonas Ilmavirta

        49.1k1271287




        49.1k1271287






























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