The Sounds of Latin: A Descriptive and Historical PhonologyLinguistic Society of America, 1945 - 220 sidor |
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Sida 45
... grammarians ?, and the manner in which the sounds developed into the Romance dialects . For both ĕ and the monophthong developing from the earlier diphthong de ( §38 ) produced in Romance an open e or its representative , but è and i ...
... grammarians ?, and the manner in which the sounds developed into the Romance dialects . For both ĕ and the monophthong developing from the earlier diphthong de ( §38 ) produced in Romance an open e or its representative , but è and i ...
Sida 56
... grammarians ' and from the evidence which follows here . I. Initial h was so weak that in Late Latin , and even to some extent in Classical Latin , there was confusion in its use , and rules were pre- scribed by grammarians . In ...
... grammarians ' and from the evidence which follows here . I. Initial h was so weak that in Late Latin , and even to some extent in Classical Latin , there was confusion in its use , and rules were pre- scribed by grammarians . In ...
Sida 61
... grammarians state that v and u were very similar in sound , and that in pronouncing it the lips were thrust out . ( F ) It was ordinarily transliterated into Greek by ov : so Ovaλeptov = Valerii , Aecoviavov = Livianum . ( G ) Parallel ...
... grammarians state that v and u were very similar in sound , and that in pronouncing it the lips were thrust out . ( F ) It was ordinarily transliterated into Greek by ov : so Ovaλeptov = Valerii , Aecoviavov = Livianum . ( G ) Parallel ...
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The Sounds of Latin: A Descriptive and Historical Phonology Roland Grubb Kent Fragmentarisk förhandsgranskning - 1963 |
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¹ Sturtevant ablaut ablaut grades ABLAUT SERIES alphabet analogy anaptyxis antevocalic aspirate assimilation became bilabial borrowed CLLat compensatory lengthening consonant consonantal dental developed dialects diphthong dissimilation dzdh earlier English Exercise Fest final syllables following words forms German grammarians Greek haplology Indo-European initial vowel inscriptions intervocalic Italic k-sound labial languages Late Latin later Latin accent lengthening liquid Lith LLat Long consonants long vowels lost medial nasal nasalized vowel non-aspirate oChSl oLat open syllables original Oscan penult phonetic PLat Plautus preceding vowel Prisc pronounced pronunciation Quint R. S. Conway recomposition rhotacism Roman root Sandhi semivowel short vowel shortened sibilant sound spelling spirant suffix syncope Umbrian unaccented velar Verg Vict voiced voiceless stop weakening whence writing