The Sounds of Latin: A Descriptive and Historical PhonologyLinguistic Society of America, 1940 - 220 sidor |
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Sida 96
... syncope was the stage after the weakening of vowels to their utmost limit ; but the phenomena of Oscan and Umbrian , with much syncope and no weakening , favor my interpretation . Words borrowed later from Greek , like balineum ( §123 ...
... syncope was the stage after the weakening of vowels to their utmost limit ; but the phenomena of Oscan and Umbrian , with much syncope and no weakening , favor my interpretation . Words borrowed later from Greek , like balineum ( §123 ...
Sida 97
... syncope after the borrowing from Greek . Gk . Hoλúdeukes ( voc . ) , whence Pollux ; the syncope was earlier than the Latin change of ld to ll ( §141 . VII ) . II . In closed medial second syllables , a short vowel after v was lost ...
... syncope after the borrowing from Greek . Gk . Hoλúdeukes ( voc . ) , whence Pollux ; the syncope was earlier than the Latin change of ld to ll ( §141 . VII ) . II . In closed medial second syllables , a short vowel after v was lost ...
Sida 98
... SYNCOPE WITH SAMPRASARANA1 is syncope , or loss of the vowel of an unaccented syllable , attended by the assumption of the vowel function by y w m n r l which formerly immediately preceded the lost vowel . In pIt.2 , e o a i might thus ...
... SYNCOPE WITH SAMPRASARANA1 is syncope , or loss of the vowel of an unaccented syllable , attended by the assumption of the vowel function by y w m n r l which formerly immediately preceded the lost vowel . In pIt.2 , e o a i might thus ...
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BIBLIOGRAPHY ABBREVIATIONS SYMBOLS | 11 |
THE ALPHABET | 33 |
22 Indication of Vowel Length | 39 |
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The Sounds of Latin: A Descriptive and Historical Phonology, Utgåva 12 Roland Grubb Kent Fragmentarisk förhandsgranskning - 1932 |
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ablaut accent alphabet analogy aspirate assimilation became become borrowed called classical CLLat closed compounds consonant contraction developed dialects difference diphthong division doubled earlier early English examples Exercise final forms German give grade Greek influence initial inscriptions intervocalic Ital Italy languages Late Latin later Latin lengthening letter liquid Lith long vowels loss lost medial nasal normal occurred oLat original palatal perhaps phonetic PLat Plautus position preceding probably produced Pron pronounced pronunciation reduced regularly remained represented Roman root short vowel shortened similar sound spelling spirant stop Study Sturtevant syllables syncope took velar Verg Vict voiced voiceless weakening whence words writing written