Term
Name the reasons that a syllable may be long: |
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Definition
1. Long by nature (because of the length of the syllable's vowel).
2. Long by position (because of the syllable structure).
ā ē ī ō ū |
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Term
When is a syllable long by nature? |
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Definition
When it contains a long vowel or a dipthong.
ā ē ī ō ū |
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Term
When is a syllable long by position? |
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Definition
When it contains a short vowel followed by two or more independent consonants, or by the double consonant x.
ā ē ī ō ū |
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Term
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Definition
ae (aisle), au (house), ei (deign), eu (no English equivalent; rare), oe (oil), ui (gooey; only in huius, cuius, huic, cui, hui)
ā ē ī ō ū |
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Term
What are the rules for word stress? |
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Definition
1. On the penultimate syllable in two-syllable words.
2. On the penultimate syllable if the syllable is long.
3. Otherwise on the antepenultimate syllable |
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Term
How can a vowel affect the length of an immediately preceding vowel? |
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Definition
Long vowels that appear before another vowel are usually shortened:
moneō not *monēō
ā ē ī ō ū |
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Term
What end-of-the-word phenomena affect the length of the ultimate syllable? |
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Definition
A long vowel appearing before a final -m, -r, or -t is shortened.
laudat not *laudāt
ā ē ī ō ū |
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Term
What end-of-syllable consonant clusters, regardless of position within a word, affect vowel length? |
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Definition
A vowel appearing before either -nt or -nd within a syllable is shortened.
laudant not *laudānt
ā ē ī ō ū |
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Term
What combinations of consonants function as a single consonant for syllabification purposes? |
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Definition
1. A stop (p,b,t,d,c,g) plus a liquid (l,r).
2. The inspearable combination qu.
3. The aspirates ch, ph, and th.
ā ē ī ō ū |
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