Vindicating Quintilian. Latin Has A Pitch Accent!

Auteurs-es

  • A.P. David

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.26512/dramaturgias20.45180

Mots-clés :

Ancient prosody, Latin accent, Quintilian, Virgil, Indo-European linguistics

Résumé

Latin grammarians borrowed terms from Greek ones to describe their native prosody; so did Latin poets use Greek metres. This is not only because they admired or fetishised the ancient Greeks. The main reason they borrowed the Greek accentual descriptors and metres is because they worked for Latin. The nature of the prosody of Latin and Greek was almost identical: a recessive contonation of changing pitch. It is false to claim that classical Latin had a stress accent, except as a byproduct of pitch contours married to quantities.

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Références

ALLEN, W. SIDNEY, Vox Graeca, 3rd edn. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,

BUTLER, HAROLD EDGEWORTH, Quintilian. With an English Translation, Cambridge:

Cambridge University Press, 1920.

DAVID, A. P., The Dance of the Muses: Choral Theory and Ancient Greek Poetics.

Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006.

DEVINE, A. M., and STEPHENS, L. D., Language and Metre. Chico, CA: Scholars

Press, 1984.

GILDERSLEEVE, B. L. and LODGE, G., Latin Grammar. London: St. Martin’s Press,

RUSSELL, DONALD A., Quintilian: The Orator’s Education, Books 1-2. Cambridge,

MA: Harvard University Press, 2001.

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Publié-e

2022-09-24

Comment citer

David, A. . (2022). Vindicating Quintilian. Latin Has A Pitch Accent!. Dramaturgias, (20), 730–743. https://doi.org/10.26512/dramaturgias20.45180