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The Latin accent: a restatement
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 November 2008
Extract
The traditional account of the position of the Latin accent is well known, both from ancient sources (e.g. Quintilian i.5.30) and from modern text-books – e.g. Kent (1932: § 66): ‘Latin developed an accent depending upon the quantity of the penultimate syllable, as follows: A long penult was accented, as in pepérci, inimtcus; but if the penult was short, the antepenult received the accent, as in extstimō, cōnfíciunt, ténebrae. Disyllables were necessarily accented on the penult, as in tégō, tóga.’
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