Introduction to Romance Languages and Literature: Latin, French, Spanish, Provençal, Italian, Volume 10Capricorn Books, 1961 - 291 pages |
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Page 57
... syllables much more strongly than had the Roman society of the classical period . The latter had distinguished syllables rather in terms of their duration ( long or short ) , whereas the common people distinguished them by stress . In ...
... syllables much more strongly than had the Roman society of the classical period . The latter had distinguished syllables rather in terms of their duration ( long or short ) , whereas the common people distinguished them by stress . In ...
Page 58
... syllables with the stress falling on the first syllable are concerned . They often lose the second syllable and become bisyllabic . The same applies to words of four syllables , where the second syllable , unstressed between two others ...
... syllables with the stress falling on the first syllable are concerned . They often lose the second syllable and become bisyllabic . The same applies to words of four syllables , where the second syllable , unstressed between two others ...
Page 65
... syllables , always weakens the last syllable , which in Latin is never stressed . It is true that Latin had polysyllabic in- flectional endings whose first syllable was stressed ( -amus , -atis , -abam , etc. ) . Such being the case ...
... syllables , always weakens the last syllable , which in Latin is never stressed . It is true that Latin had polysyllabic in- flectional endings whose first syllable was stressed ( -amus , -atis , -abam , etc. ) . Such being the case ...
Table des matières
B Vulgar Latin | 21 |
The Invasions | 36 |
E Trends in Linguistic Development | 56 |
Droits d'auteur | |
6 autres sections non affichées
Expressions et termes fréquents
antiquity artistic beautiful became bourgeois bourgeoisie Catalan Catholic chansons de geste Chrétien de Troyes Christian Church classical Latin comedies composed conception contemporary countries Dante dialects domination drama elegant empire entire epic especially esthetic Europe European example famous feudal fifteenth France French Gaul genre Germanic tribes Greek honnêtes human Humanists Iberian Peninsula ideas imitated important influence intellectual Italian Italy Jansenist king large number later linguistic literary language literature living Louis XIV Low Latin lyric poetry medieval Middle Ages modern Molière moral moralistic movement mystical nature novel origin Paris Passion period persons Petrarch philosophical plays poems poet poetic prose Prov Provençal realistic religious Renaissance Revolution Roman Romance languages satire scholars second half seventeenth century sixteenth century sometimes soul Spain Spanish spirit style subjects syllables taste thirteenth century tion tradition trends twelfth century unity vernacular vowels Vulgar Latin words writers written wrote