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Latin Phonology

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Latin Phonology The Sounds of Latin 13 September 2004 Vowels macron: line over a vowel, e.g., , indicating a long vowel sound short mark: arc over a vowel, e.g., ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Latin Phonology


1
Latin Phonology
  • The Sounds of Latin
  • 13 September 2004

2
Vowels
  • macron line over a vowel, e.g., a, indicating a
    long vowel sound
  • short mark arc over a vowel, e.g., a,
    indicating a short vowel sound
  • a a as in ago
  • a a as in father
  • e e as in left
  • e a as in late

3
Other Vowels
  • i i as in hit
  • i ee as screen
  • o o as in often
  • o o as in hope
  • u u as in put
  • u u as in jute

4
Diphthongs
  • Two vowels blended, e.g., ea in eat
  • ae y as in by
  • au ow as in now

5
Consonants
  • g always hard, as in go, never as in gem
  • i as a consonant, y as in yes
  • In the late Middle Ages, the letter j came to
    replace the consonantal function of i, such that
    Julius would be pronounced, Yoo-lee-us
  • r trilled (roll the tongue, a bit like the sound
    of a growling dog)

6
Other Consonants
  • s s as in sing, never the z sound as in is
  • u w as in wine, when used as a consonant after q
    and followed by a vowel, and sometimes after s
    or g
  • v w as in wine
  • When the characters u and v became distinguished,
    u functioned as a vowel, while v functioned as
    the consonant

7
Latin Grammar
8
Declensions
  • Groupings of nouns with similar endings
  • There are 5 declensions in Latin. (We will cover
    the first and second. We might start the third.)

9
Parts of a Noun
  • Base
  • Case Ending
  • See pp. 3-4

10
Case
  • Feature of a noun that helps to identify the part
    of the sentence in which the noun is functioning.
  • Cf. Eng. I and me. I is in the subjective case.
    I can only be a subject or predicate nominative
    (subjective complement). Me is in the objective
    case and can be a direct object, indirect object,
    etc.

11
Abbreviations
  • E.g. ? exempli gratia, for example
  • I.e. ? id est, that is
  • Etc. ? et cetera, and the other things
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