A Key to the Classical Pronunciation of Greek, Latin and Scripture Proper Names: In which the Words are Accented and Divided Into Syllables Exactly as They Ought to be Pronounced, According to Rules Drawn from Analogy and the Best Usage : to which are Added, Terminational Vocabularies of Hebrew, Greek and Latiln Proper Names, in which the Words are Arranged According to Their Final Syllables, and Classed According to Their Accents : by which the General Analogy of Pronunciation May be Seen at One View, and the Accentuation of Each Word More Earily Remembered : Concluding with Observations on the Greek and Latin Accent and Quantity : with Some Probable Conjectures on the Method of Freeing Them from the Obscurity and Confusion in which They are Involved, Both by the Ancients and Moderns ... |
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Page xiii
Before two consonants no yowel sound is ever made long , except that of the diphthong au ; so that whenever a doubled consonant occurs , the preceding syllable is short * .
Before two consonants no yowel sound is ever made long , except that of the diphthong au ; so that whenever a doubled consonant occurs , the preceding syllable is short * .
Page xvi
This , however , may be questioned ; for if in Latin words this impure sound of e takes place only in those words where the accent is on the preceding vowel , as in nario , fucio , & c .; but not when the accent follows the t , and is ...
This , however , may be questioned ; for if in Latin words this impure sound of e takes place only in those words where the accent is on the preceding vowel , as in nario , fucio , & c .; but not when the accent follows the t , and is ...
Page xxi
See Principles of English Pronunciation prefixed to the Critical Pronouncing Dictionary , No. 92 , and the letter A. 8. E final , either with or without the preceding consonant , always forms a distinct syllable , as Penelope ...
See Principles of English Pronunciation prefixed to the Critical Pronouncing Dictionary , No. 92 , and the letter A. 8. E final , either with or without the preceding consonant , always forms a distinct syllable , as Penelope ...
Page xxiii
But when the accent is on the first of the diphthongal vowels , the preceding consonant does not go into sh , but preserves its sound pure , as Miltiades , Antiates , & c . See the word Satiety in the Crit . Pron . Dict . 11.
But when the accent is on the first of the diphthongal vowels , the preceding consonant does not go into sh , but preserves its sound pure , as Miltiades , Antiates , & c . See the word Satiety in the Crit . Pron . Dict . 11.
Page xxv
It must have frequently occurred to those who instruct youth , that though the quantity of the accented syllable of long proper names has been easily conveyed , yet that the quantity of 1 the preceding unaccented syllables has ...
It must have frequently occurred to those who instruct youth , that though the quantity of the accented syllable of long proper names has been easily conveyed , yet that the quantity of 1 the preceding unaccented syllables has ...
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Common terms and phrases
accent and quantity Accent the Antepenultimate Accent the Penultimate accented syllable according acute accent adjective adopted alter analogy ancients anglicised antepenultimate syllable appears Assyria beginning called cent circumflex common consonants Critical Dictionary diphthong distinct ending English English pronunciation English words exactly express falling final followed former frequently give Gouldman grave Greek and Latin hear Hebrew higher Holyoke idea inflexion Initial Vocabulary Labbe language Latin Proper Names learned Lempriere letters long quantity loud lower manner mean Milton nature necessarily nounced observed opinion penultimate syllable place the accent preceding prefer prefixed present preserve produce pronounced pronunciation prosodists question reading reason respect rising Rule says scholars seems sentence short singing soft sometimes sound speaking suppose tells termination three syllables tone true unaccented verse voice vowel writer written
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