Latin for Today: Book Four |
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Page 1
I Scansion In this lesson the length of a syllable is marked where it is desired to illustrate a point : it will thus be clear which syllable is intended . Stress and accent play their part in Latin poetry : rhyme does not occur .
I Scansion In this lesson the length of a syllable is marked where it is desired to illustrate a point : it will thus be clear which syllable is intended . Stress and accent play their part in Latin poetry : rhyme does not occur .
Page 3
For the purposes of scansion remember that some syllables are naturally long , some naturally short , others long by ... Long by position : a syllable coming before two consonants whether these occur in the same word , or one is at the ...
For the purposes of scansion remember that some syllables are naturally long , some naturally short , others long by ... Long by position : a syllable coming before two consonants whether these occur in the same word , or one is at the ...
Page 4
When a vowel at the end of one word precedes a vowel at the beginning of another word , then elision takes place , i.e. it is cut off and does not count for purposes of scansion , though no doubt the syllable was lightly pronounced in ...
When a vowel at the end of one word precedes a vowel at the beginning of another word , then elision takes place , i.e. it is cut off and does not count for purposes of scansion , though no doubt the syllable was lightly pronounced in ...
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Contents
LESSON | 1 |
CAIUS VALERIUS CATULLUSXIII III VThe Sequence | 2 |
Indirect Question | 14 |
Copyright | |
22 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
ablative accusative active adjective Aeneas āre āri army atque ātum āvi battle Caesar called camp carry Catilina Cicero clause command consul dative death derived Drill and Review enemy English erat ere ere etiam Explain express fear fight final future genitive gerundive give Greek haec Hannibal indicative indirect infinitive inis Italy king Lesson meaning mihi nihil noun object omnia ōnis participle pass passive past perfect person plur present quae quam question quid quis quod Read refers Roman Rome senate sentences subjunctive sunt syllable tense tibi Translate into Latin Troia Trojans verb