Dès les IIIe-IVe s., la sensibilité des latinophones à la quantité des syllabes s'était progressivement perdue. La connaissance de la prosodie étant cruciale pour la lecture et la composition en latin, les médiévaux conçurent la solution des florilèges prosodiques, des recueils fonctionnels à l'apprentissage, composés de vers latins classiques et médiévaux, tirés des auteurs scolaires (Virgile, Ovide, Perse, Juvénal Stace, Prudence, etc.). Instruments à la fois d'enseignement et d'apprentissage, ces florilèges ont été transmis en 6 recueils différents à partir du IXe siècle. Cette thèse porte sur l'édition critique de ce corpus, base solide pour une nouvelle étude sur l'origine de ces instruments, leurs compilateurs et les milieux d'utilisa...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 1984The author of this dissertation has written a compute...
This dissertation examines the relationship between phonetic sound and content in Latin poetry, with...
There was a growing gap between the spoken and the written forms of Latin during the last centuries ...
A partire dal III-IV sec. d.C., la sensibilità dei parlanti latino alla quantità delle sillabe si pe...
The paper aims at commenting and closely inspecting two types of sources, which concern the debated ...
The classical florilegia in Latin were very popular in the Middle Ages : from the four centuries (ni...
The term Medieval Latin refers to Latin from c. 500 until c. 1500 ce. In the first few centuries, Me...
After having treated the prosodie florilegia and the florilegia with « author- sections » in the fir...
A detailed analysis of the contribution of Latin ancient grammarians to the theory of syllable
Ao lado da tradução integral e inaugural em língua portuguesa dos 1456 versos do Waltharius, escrito...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis, comprising four introductory chapters and Latin...
Late Latin texts, however chaotic or artificial they may seem, furnish precious information about th...
LUCE GIARD: From Medieval Latin to the Piurality of Languages at the Turn ofthe Renaissance The tra...
Vocalic quantity is a fundamental feature of the prosody in Latin language and, although not usually...
International audienceThis study goes back to the appearance of scripturality in Rome to grasp the o...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 1984The author of this dissertation has written a compute...
This dissertation examines the relationship between phonetic sound and content in Latin poetry, with...
There was a growing gap between the spoken and the written forms of Latin during the last centuries ...
A partire dal III-IV sec. d.C., la sensibilità dei parlanti latino alla quantità delle sillabe si pe...
The paper aims at commenting and closely inspecting two types of sources, which concern the debated ...
The classical florilegia in Latin were very popular in the Middle Ages : from the four centuries (ni...
The term Medieval Latin refers to Latin from c. 500 until c. 1500 ce. In the first few centuries, Me...
After having treated the prosodie florilegia and the florilegia with « author- sections » in the fir...
A detailed analysis of the contribution of Latin ancient grammarians to the theory of syllable
Ao lado da tradução integral e inaugural em língua portuguesa dos 1456 versos do Waltharius, escrito...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis, comprising four introductory chapters and Latin...
Late Latin texts, however chaotic or artificial they may seem, furnish precious information about th...
LUCE GIARD: From Medieval Latin to the Piurality of Languages at the Turn ofthe Renaissance The tra...
Vocalic quantity is a fundamental feature of the prosody in Latin language and, although not usually...
International audienceThis study goes back to the appearance of scripturality in Rome to grasp the o...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 1984The author of this dissertation has written a compute...
This dissertation examines the relationship between phonetic sound and content in Latin poetry, with...
There was a growing gap between the spoken and the written forms of Latin during the last centuries ...