
Latin Grammarians On The Latin Accent Offers A Fresh Perspective On A Long-standing Debate About The Value Of Latin Grammarians Writing About The Latin Accent: Should The Information They Give Us Be Taken Seriously, Or Should Much Of It Be Dismissed As Copied Mindlessly From Greek Sources? This Book Focusses On Understanding The Latin Grammarians On Their Own Terms: What They Actually Say About Accents, And What They Mean By It. Careful Examination Of Greek And Latin Grammatical Texts Leads To A Better Understanding Of The Workings Of Greek Grammatical Theory On Prosody, And Of Its Interpretation In The Latin Grammatical Tradition. It Emerges That Latin Grammarians Took Over From Greek Grammarians A System Of Grammatical Description That Operated On Two Levels: An Abstract Level That We Are Not Supposed To Be Able To Hear, And The Concrete Level Of Audible Speech. The Two Levels Are Linked By A System Of Rules. Some Points Of Greek Thought On Prosody Were Taken Over Onto The Abstract Level And Not Intended As Statements About The Actual Sound Of Latin, While Other Points Were So Intended. While This Book Largely Sets Aside The Question Whether The Latin Grammarians Tell Us The Truth About The Latin Accent, Focussing Instead On Understanding What They Actually Say, It Begins To Offer Answers For Those Wishing To Know When To 'believe' Latin Grammarians In The Traditional Sense: The Book Shows Which Of Their Statements Are Intended - And Which Are Not Intended - As Statements About The Actual Sound Of Latin.
This book investigates the reliability and interpretive framework of ancient Latin grammarians regarding the Latin accent. Philomen Probert, a specialist in classical linguistics, examines the intersection of Greek grammatical theory and Latin practice. The work argues that these grammarians utilized a dual-level system of description—abstract and concrete—which must be decoded to distinguish between theoretical constructs and actual phonetic observations.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the field of classical philology recognize this work as a significant contribution to the understanding of ancient linguistic theory. Readers frequently note the technical density of the prose, which is intended for an audience with a strong background in Latin and Greek grammar.
Page Count:
352
Publication Date:
2019-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192578650
ISBN-13:
9780192578655
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