10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «HEPHTHEMIMERAL»
Discover the use of
hephthemimeral in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
hephthemimeral and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Greek and Roman Versification
_.u_ ibis Liburnis [ inter alts. navium ; Next the Hephthemimeral alter the fourth
Arsisz— U—U—U—V I—U—U— nam qualis aut Molossus | aut fulvus Laco. The
Penthemimeral Csesura preponderates in Euripides more than in Eschylus and ...
2
Homer: The creation of the poems
It was necessary to insist on the point here in order to show that there are no
noun— epithet formulae in the genitive case after the hephthemimeral caesura
which can be used freely in different combinations, like the many which appear in
the ...
Irene J. F. de Jong, 1999
3
The Making of Homeric Verse: The Collected Papers of Milman ...
It was necessary to insist on the point here in order to show that there are no
noun-epithet formulae in the genitive case after the hephthemimeral caesura
which can be used freely in different combinations, like the many which appear in
the ...
Milman Parry, Adam Parry, 1987
4
A Guide to Latin Meter and Verse Composition
This “main caesura” typically occurs either after two-and-a-half feet (called “
penthemimeral,” i.e. after five halffeet) or after three-and-a—half feet (called “
hephthemimeral,” i.e. after seven halffeet). The penthemimeral caesura is
somewhat more ...
5
Res metrica: an introduction to the study of Greek & Roman ...
... where the hephthemimeral caesura again seems to me clearly the dominant
one. The reasons given for the procedure are unconvincing. ' Ancient writers
differ as to whether the trochaic or hephthemimeral caesura should take
precedence.
William Ross Hardie, 1920
6
Euripidu Iphigeneia Hē En Aulidi Kai Hē En Taurois : ...
435. to have been pronounced, Tè ‚гейш падший: énorsóoag orgasmi', We shall
immediately perceive the use of the elision after the third foot of a senarius which
has neither the penthemimeral nor the hephthemimeral caesura. The elision ...
7
The Cambridge Companion to Homer
... of ten there is a word break either after the first long syllable of the fourth foot (
the C1 or hephthemimeral caesura) or between the end of the fourth andthe
beginning of thefifth foot (the C2or bucolic dieresis): C1 or hephthemimeral
caesura: ...
8
A Treatise on Homer, with miscellaneous questions
A division of the verse also frequently occurs in the middle of the fourth foot,
which is called the hephthemimeral caesura. There are very few verses, however
, containing this, in which the other is not also found. The following are nearly all
the ...
John Richard Darley (bp. of Kilmore, Elphin and Ardagh.), 1839
9
A grammar of the Greek language, for the use of schools and ...
Many lines have both j but the penthemimeral is more frequent than the
hephthemimeral in the proportion of four to one. IV. The caesura is allowed to fall
on a monosyllable, either with or without the elision, as well as on the last
syllable of a ...
Charles Anthon, John Richardson Major, 1840
10
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology
Eight of these involve the penthemimeral and seven the hephthemimeral caesura
. The passages are presented in their entirety as follows: I. Penthemimeral
Caesura 23 ( = 377) ai8eio9ai 9' iepfja icai cr/Xaa 8Ex9ai aTtoiva- 263-264 olov ...