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El. knyga: Terence and the Verb 'To Be' in Latin

(Fellow by Examination, Magdalen College, University of Oxford)
  • Formatas: 400 pages
  • Serija: Oxford Classical Monographs
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Jul-2015
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780191055829
  • Formatas: 400 pages
  • Serija: Oxford Classical Monographs
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Jul-2015
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780191055829

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Terence and the Verb 'To Be' in Latin is the first in-depth study of the verb 'to be' in Latin (esse) and some of its hidden properties. Like the English 'be' (e.g. it's), the Latin forms ofesse could undergo phonetic reduction or contraction. This phenomenon is largely unknown since classical texts have undergone a long process of transmission over the centuries, which has altered or deleted its traces. Although they are often neglected by scholars and puzzling to students, the use of contracted forms is shown to be widespread and significant. These forms expose the clitic nature ofesse, which also explains other properties of the verb, including its participation in a prosodic simplification with a host ending in-s (sigmatic ecthlipsis), a phenomenon which is also discussed in the volume. After an introduction on methodology, the volume discusses the linguistic significance of such phenomena, focusing in particular on analysis of their behaviour in the plays of the ancient Roman playwright, Terence. Combining traditional scholarship with the use of digital resources, the volume explores the orthographic, phonological, semantic, and syntactic aspects of the verbesse, revealing that cliticization is a key feature of the verb 'to be' in Latin, and that contractions deserve a place within its paradigm.

Recenzijos

Pezzini's study builds up a substantial claim about Romans' understanding of the verb "to be" through detailed analysis of its orthographic, phonological, semantic and syntactic aspects in the plays of the Roman comic dramatist, Terence ... Pezzini's argument is technical but ... lucid enough for a non-expert to follow. It leads him persuasively to the conclusion that Latin speakers distinguished between meanings of "to be" in strong, existential or locational senses, and weaker, auxiliary or copula senses. * Teresa Morgan, The Times Literary Supplement *

List of Boxes and Tables
xv
I Introduction
1(26)
1 Overture: Linguistic Puzzles
1(5)
2 Aims and Findings
6(8)
2.1 `Real' Latin
6(3)
2.2 Contractions in Latin
9(2)
2.3 Omission of Final -s
11(2)
2.4 Implications
13(1)
3 Methodological Issues
14(8)
3.1 Variant Forms
14(1)
3.2 Speech and Spelling
15(2)
3.3 Sociolects, Registers, Genres
17(1)
3.4 Diachronic Factors
18(1)
3.5 Linguistic `Intertextuality'
19(1)
3.6 Syntactic and Pragmatic Factors: Contracted Forms
20(1)
3.7 The Latin Linguist
21(1)
4 `To Be' in Latin: A (Short) History
22(2)
5 Statistics
24(3)
II Contraction of esse: Collection of Evidence
27(72)
1 Introduction
27(3)
2 Phonological Patterns
30(6)
3 The Evidence
36(63)
3.1 Direct Transmission in Manuscripts
37(15)
3.1.1 Collection of Data
37(13)
3.1.2 A Particular Type of Reading
50(2)
3.2 Metre
52(4)
3.3 Indirect Transmission in Manuscripts
56(9)
3.4 Inscriptions
65(10)
3.4.1 Collection of Data
65(7)
3.4.2 Some General Remarks
72(3)
3.5 Grammarians
75(10)
3.5.1 Marius Victorinus
75(5)
3.5.2 Consentius
80(3)
3.5.3 Velius Longus
83(2)
3.6 Sabellian Languages
85(2)
3.7 Other Types of Evidence
87(3)
3.8 The Second Person Form
90(9)
3.8.1 Direct and Indirect Transmission in Manuscripts
91(3)
3.8.2 Metre
94(3)
3.8.3 Inscriptions and Other Types of Evidence
97(2)
III Contraction of esse: Phonological Analysis and Historical Appraisal
99(42)
1 Phonological Discussion
99(24)
1.1 Contracted Spellings as Abbreviations
99(2)
1.2 Contractions as Sandhi Spellings
101(5)
1.3 Contractions Reflecting the Cliticization of esse
106(2)
1.4 The Pattern -est <? -is + est
108(15)
1.4.1 The Evidence
108(3)
1.4.2 Incongruence in Gender
111(4)
1.4.3 est as the Original Phonological Outcome of -is + est
115(2)
1.4.4 Two Problematic Pieces of Evidence
117(2)
1.4.5 Different Ways of Dealing with the Evidence
119(1)
1.4.6 est as a Misspelling of -ist
120(2)
1.4.7 Final Remarks
122(1)
2 Historical Appraisal of Contracted Forms
123(15)
2.1 Orthography
123(9)
2.1.1 Early Latin (Third and Second Centuries BC)
123(3)
2.1.2 Classical Latin (First Century BC to Second Century AD)
126(5)
2.1.3 Late Latin (Third to Sixth Centuries AD)
131(1)
2.2 Speech
132(6)
3 Final Remarks
138(3)
IV Analysis of Contracted Forms in Terence
141(52)
1 The Pattern -us + (e)st/(e)s
141(35)
1.1 `Minimal Pairs'
142(2)
1.2 The Evidence
144(1)
1.3 Metre
145(2)
1.4 Semantics
147(7)
1.5 Style
154(5)
1.5.1 Verse Type
154(3)
1.5.2 Character Type
157(2)
1.5.3 Some General Remarks
159(1)
1.6 Syntax and Word Order
159(11)
1.6.1 Type of Host Word and Clausal Position of the Verb
160(4)
1.6.2 Syntactic Constraints on Contraction
164(6)
1.7 Opus (e)st
170(6)
1.7.1 Terence
170(5)
1.7.2 Plautus
175(1)
2 Contractions after -V and -Vm
176(5)
3 Limits of Contraction
181(8)
3.1 Contraction after Monosyllables
181(4)
3.2 Contraction after Syntactic Breaks
185(4)
4 Final Remarks
189(4)
V Sigmatic Ecthlipsis and Cliticization of esse
193(42)
1 First Premise: Final-s in Latin
193(12)
1.1 Weak Articulation of -s
193(4)
1.2 Omission of Final -s in Early Latin Inscriptions
197(1)
1.3 Sigmatic Ecthlipsis in Latin Poetry: A Short History
198(7)
2 Second Premise: The Metre of Roman Comedy
205(2)
3 Sigmatic Ecthlipsis: Editors' Choices
207(2)
4 Terence: The Metrical Evidence
209(15)
4.1 Overview
209(5)
4.2 Sigmatic Ecthlipsis in a Resolved Element
214(8)
4.2.1 Syllables Occupying the Second Place of a Resolved Element
214(2)
4.2.2 Final -5 in Prosodically Iambic Words
216(3)
4.2.3 Sigmatic Ecthlipsis vs. Iambic Shortening
219(3)
4.3 Sigmatic Ecthlipsis in a Light Monosyllabic Element
222(2)
5 Linguistic Observations
224(7)
5.1 Phonological Explanation: The Sequence -s s- at Word Boundaries
224(3)
5.2 Cliticization of the Verb esse
227(4)
6 Epilogue: Sigmatic Ecthlipsis in Plautus
231(4)
VI Conclusions
235(14)
1 Contracted Spellings of estles
235(2)
2 Contraction of esse as Speech Phenomenon
237(1)
3 Prosodic Reduction in -s + sum/sim/sis/sit
238(1)
4 Cliticization of esse
239(2)
5 The Semantics of esse
241(2)
6 The Syntactic Nature of esse
243(3)
7 Word Order: The Position of esse
246(1)
8 Final Remarks
247(2)
Appendix
249(68)
1 Evidence for Contraction in Terence
249(6)
1.1 Contracted Spellings in the Manuscript Tradition of Terence
249(4)
1.2 Metrically Reconstructed Forms
253(1)
1.3 Editors' Choices
253(2)
2 Omission of Final -s in CIL 12
255(10)
3 Lines Potentially Involving Sigmatic Ecthlipsis in Terence
265(52)
3.1 Category 1: Uncertain Scansions
265(1)
3.2 Category 2: Anceps Elements
266(30)
3.3 Category 3: Indifferent Elements
296(2)
3.4 Category 4: Heavy Monosyllabic Elements
298(9)
3.5 Category 5: Disyllabic Resolved Elements
307(8)
3.6 Category 6: Light Elements
315(2)
Reference List 317(16)
General Index 333(5)
Index of Words 338(1)
Index Locorum Potiorum 339
Giuseppe Pezzini is a Fellow by Examination at Magdalen College, University of Oxford.