Vox Latina

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Cambridge University Press, 1989 - 133 páginas
This is a reissue in paperback of the second edition of Professor Allen's highly successful book on the pronunciation of Latin in Rome in the Golden Age. In the second edition the text of the first edition is reprinted virtually unchanged but is followed by a section of supplementary notes that deal with subsequent developments in the subject. The author also added an appendix on the names of the letters of the Latin alphabet and a select bibliography.
 

Índice

IV
11
V
12
VI
20
VII
26
VIII
27
IX
32
X
34
XI
37
XXIV
67
XXV
68
XXVI
71
XXVII
73
XXVIII
74
XXX
75
XXXI
78
XXXII
83

XII
43
XIII
45
XIV
47
XVI
50
XVII
53
XVIII
56
XIX
60
XX
64
XXI
65
XXIII
66
XXXIV
89
XXXVI
95
XXXVII
100
XXXIX
102
XL
111
XLI
116
XLII
131
XLIII
132
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Página 2 - The prominence of sounds may be due to inherent sonority (carrying power), to length or to stress or to special intonation, or to combinations of these. 210. Thus in every sentence there is a kind of undulation of prominence which is easily perceived by the hearer. This undulation may be visualized as a wavy line with 'peaks' (denoting maxima of prominence) and Valleys' (denoting minima of prominence).

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