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 ...authors, 1804 - 285 pages |
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Page x
... English should pay a compliment to the learned Hinc factum est ut tanta in pronunciando varietas exifteret ut pauci inter se in literarum sonis consentiant . Quod quidem mirum non esset , si indocti tantùm à doctis in eo , ac non ipsi ...
... English should pay a compliment to the learned Hinc factum est ut tanta in pronunciando varietas exifteret ut pauci inter se in literarum sonis consentiant . Quod quidem mirum non esset , si indocti tantùm à doctis in eo , ac non ipsi ...
Page xi
... English are accused not only of departing from the genuine sound of the Greek and Latin vowels , but of violating the quantity of these languages more than the people of any other nation in Europe . The author of the Essay upon the ...
... English are accused not only of departing from the genuine sound of the Greek and Latin vowels , but of violating the quantity of these languages more than the people of any other nation in Europe . The author of the Essay upon the ...
Page xii
... English scholars their pronunciation of Latin , with regard to essential points , arises from two causes only : first , from a total inattention to 66 the length of vowel - sounds , making them long or short 66 merely as chance directs ...
... English scholars their pronunciation of Latin , with regard to essential points , arises from two causes only : first , from a total inattention to 66 the length of vowel - sounds , making them long or short 66 merely as chance directs ...
Page xiii
... English pronunciation : which , it may be observed , has a genius of its own ; and which , if not so well adapted to the pronunciation of Greek and Latin as some other modern languages , has as fixed and settled rules for pronouncing ...
... English pronunciation : which , it may be observed , has a genius of its own ; and which , if not so well adapted to the pronunciation of Greek and Latin as some other modern languages , has as fixed and settled rules for pronouncing ...
Page xv
... English words . The general rules are followed almost without exception . The first and most obvious powers of the letters are adopted , and there is scarcely any difficulty but in the position of the accent ; and this depends so much ...
... English words . The general rules are followed almost without exception . The first and most obvious powers of the letters are adopted , and there is scarcely any difficulty but in the position of the accent ; and this depends so much ...
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Common terms and phrases
accent and quantity Accent the Antepenultimate Accent the Penultimate accent this word accented syllable acute accent adjective adopted Ainsworth analogy ancients anglicised antepenultimate accent antepenultimate syllable chus ci-a circumflex consonants COOKE's Hesiod Critical Pronouncing Dictionary diphthong ending a syllable English pronunciation English words Forster Gouldman grave accent Greek and Latin Greek language Greek or Latin Greek word Hebrew Hesiod Holyoke human voice Idomeneus inflexion Initial Vocabulary Iphigenia Iphimedia Kir'jath Labbe last syllable LATIN ACCENT Latin languages Latin Proper Names Latin words learned Lempriere letters long quantity loud louder Milton Nemuel noun eye nounced observed penultimate accent penultimate syllable phis pi-a place the accent preceding prefixed pronun pronunciation pronunciation of Greek prosodists prosody Rule says Scotch second syllable she-a si-a singing soft speaking sounds suppose syllable Terminational Vocabulary Theog three syllables ti-a tone unaccented syllable verse vowel written
Popular passages
Page 218 - Muse, that on the secret top Of Oreb, or of Sinai, didst inspire That shepherd, who first taught the chosen seed, In the beginning how the heavens and earth Rose out of chaos...
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Page 267 - In nnaqnaque parle orationis arsis et thesis sunt velut in " hac parte natura : ut quando dico natu, elevatur vox et est arsis in tu : " quando vero ra deprimitur vox et est thesis." Any one would conclude from this description of the rising and falling of the voice upon this word, that it could only be pronounced one way, and that there was no difference...
Page 255 - It is well known, however, that the resistance to a change, whether from a low to a high, or from a high to a low range of prices, is at first very considerable, and that there is generally a pause of greater or less duration before the turn becomes manifest ; in the interval, while sales are difficult or impracticable, unless at a difference in price, which the buyer, in the one case, and the seller, in the other...
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Page 248 - O yes ! 0 yes ! in a perfect sameness of Voice. But however ridiculous the monotone in speaking may be in the above-mentioned characters, in certain solemn and sublime passages in poetry it has a wonderful...
Page xxviii - Words of two syllables, either Greek or Latin, whatever be the quantity in the original, have, in English pronunciation, the accent on the first syllable : and if a single consonant come between...