The sounds of Latin: a descriptive and historical phonology |
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In Classical Latin, t never had the sound i before t (and e) + a vowel, which it has
in English nation, but was the voiceless stop, as is clear from the descriptions of
the sound given by the grammarians* and from the Greek Tf porta, ...
In Classical Latin, t never had the sound i before t (and e) + a vowel, which it has
in English nation, but was the voiceless stop, as is clear from the descriptions of
the sound given by the grammarians* and from the Greek Tf porta, ...
Sida 57
languages have the A-sound but the borrowed words show no trace of h-: from
hortua (where h is shown by Greek xoprot 'grass', to l>e original) came Gothic
a&rtja 'gardener', aurti-gards 'garden', Old English ort- geard 'garden, orchard'. II.
languages have the A-sound but the borrowed words show no trace of h-: from
hortua (where h is shown by Greek xoprot 'grass', to l>e original) came Gothic
a&rtja 'gardener', aurti-gards 'garden', Old English ort- geard 'garden, orchard'. II.
Sida 60
Consonantal I was a palatal semivowel like English y, though perhaps a little less
strongly consonantal.1 When intervocalic, Latin j had double value, being iy , the
t' forming a diphthong with the preceding vowel, and the j/-sound commencing ...
Consonantal I was a palatal semivowel like English y, though perhaps a little less
strongly consonantal.1 When intervocalic, Latin j had double value, being iy , the
t' forming a diphthong with the preceding vowel, and the j/-sound commencing ...
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The sounds of Latin: a descriptive and historical phonology Roland Grubb Kent Fragmentarisk förhandsgranskning - 1945 |
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ablaut ablaut grades Ablaut Series alphabet analogy anaptyxis antevocalic aspirate assimilation became bilabial borrowed ciXat ClLat compensatory lengthening compounds consonant consonantal developed dialects dissimilation dzdh earlier English Exercise Fest final syllables following words forms German grammarians Grassmann's Law Greek haplology Indo-European initial consonants initial vowel inscriptions intervocalic Italic labial languages Late Latin later Latin accent lengthening Linguistic liquid Lith lLat Long consonants long vowels lost medial nasal nasalized vowel non-aspirate non-initial syllables normal oChSl oLat open syllables original Oscan penult phonetic pLat Plautus position preceding vowel Prise pronounced pronunciation Quint R. S. Conway recomposition rhotacism Roman root Sandhi semivowel short vowel shortened sibilant sound spelling spirant Sturtevant suffix syncope transliterated Umbrian unaccented velar Verg Vict voiced voiceless stop weakening whence writing