Acta Classica Universitatis Scientiarum Debreceniensis (DE-journals)
Állandó link (URI) ehhez a gyűjteményhez
A folyóirat a DE-journals platformon keresztül jelenik meg és a https://ojs.lib.unideb.hu/classica címen érhető el.
Böngészés
Acta Classica Universitatis Scientiarum Debreceniensis (DE-journals) Tárgyszó szerinti böngészés "/ graphemic oscillation"
Megjelenítve 1 - 2 (Összesen 2)
Találat egy oldalon
Rendezési lehetőségek
Tétel Szabadon hozzáférhető Preliminary Investigation on the / Graphemic Oscillation in Latin Inscriptions From Rome(2020-09-01) Papini, AlessandroThis paper is aimed at supplementing the results obtained in Papini 2019. In particular, I will consider the position of the investigated <ae>/<ĕ> and <ae>/<ē> graphemic oscillations with respect to both 1) lexical stress (distinguishing between misspellings occurring in stressed and unstressed position) and 2) syllabic structure (i.e., open vs closed syllables). The aim of the present paper is to verify whether the relationship between the investigated spelling variations and these two variables might be regarded as simply due to chance.Tétel Szabadon hozzáférhető Some preliminary remarks concerning sociolinguistic variation within the „Vulgar” Latin vowel system: as evidenced by the inscriptional data(2020-08-10) Papini, AlessandroThis paper aims to investigate whether a statistical analysis of linguistic data in inscriptions may serve for the study of sociolinguistic variation within the Latin Language. In particular, this study focuses on the quantitative vs. qualitative phonemic opposition within the vowel system of the so-called “Vulgar” Latin. In order to do so, we will study the relative frequency of the <ae>/<ē> and <ae>/<ĕ> graphemic oscillations in three different corpora of both synchronic and syntopic - but diaphasically and diastratically different - inscriptions from the city of Rome (cf. Mancini 2014). All the inscriptions considered in this sample date back from ca. 50 AD to ca. 250 AD (the last date referring to the “end” ofso-called Classical Latin according to Adamik 2015). Our results may point to the existence of a “disturbance” within the quantitative-based vowel system of Classical Latin, at least as far as some sub-standard varieties of the language are concerned.