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There is a page named "Talk:Latin prosody" on Wikipedia

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  • specific cases, such as the prosody of comic drama, which I won't develop here. This article is an overview of Latin prosody in the late republic/early...
    64 KB (4,796 words) - 17:23, 27 May 2024
  • Even if you go back to Greek and Latin grammarians prosody was one thing and metrics/meters was another. Prosody related *properly speaking* to accents...
    5 KB (678 words) - 20:00, 14 February 2024
  • and Latin Poetry by Halporn, Ostwald and Rosenmeyer. Cynwolfe (talk) 14:23, 26 August 2008 (UTC) This article was almost entirely about Latin prosody and...
    4 KB (580 words) - 23:03, 30 January 2024
  • hexameter and Prosody (Latin) do not mention it, and even standard textbooks such as D. S. Raven's Latin Metre stop short of medieval Latin). It is also...
    3 KB (441 words) - 09:40, 31 July 2024
  • 12:25, 8 March 2010 (UTC) The same goes for the latin and greek "prosody" articles. It's "metrics" not prosody. Thank you. — Preceding unsigned comment added...
    9 KB (1,327 words) - 15:42, 12 August 2024
  • I have removed the sentence "He maintained that English prosody depended on the number of "stresses" in a line, not on the number of syllables, and that...
    5 KB (750 words) - 00:40, 11 January 2024
  • it to Wiktionary or an appropriate article if you like: In Greek and Latin prosody, an Ionic foot is a foot that consists of two long syllables followed...
    2 KB (344 words) - 18:50, 16 July 2011
  • Talk:Clausula (rhetoric) (category C-Class Latin articles)
    the article. Maybe it's familiar to those who are already familiar with prosody, but not everyone is. (I'm not.) So the notation ought to be explained...
    1 KB (118 words) - 23:00, 12 February 2024
  • definitely part of Sanskrit prosody as well. It is even called a 'pada' which is clearly a cognate with the greek/latin term. The meter is so consistent...
    9 KB (1,168 words) - 07:52, 3 February 2024
  • feet. The double pipe represents a caesura. Perhaps the explanation in Prosody (Latin) would be more to your taste; it's difficult to tell what might satisfy...
    875 bytes (99 words) - 05:57, 18 January 2024
  • - one by Ramacharana on Sanskrit prosody, one by Matirama is on Prakrit prosody - and Prakrit and Sanskrit prosody are MOSTLY the same. If somebody cannot...
    47 KB (7,218 words) - 06:10, 9 June 2024
  • Talk:Catholicon (1286) (category Start-Class Latin articles)
    treatises on orthography, etymology, grammar, prosody, rhetoric, and an etymological dictionary of the Latin language (primae, mediae et infimae Latinitatis)...
    3 KB (427 words) - 15:04, 12 February 2024
  • page is not a discussion of Latin phonemes; it's a discussion of Latin letters. (C and K are not different phonemes in Latin; they are two letters for the...
    93 KB (14,521 words) - 18:32, 15 April 2020
  • metres. The heavy hand of Greek prosody would continue to have a pronounced influence on the style and syntax of Latin poetry until the rise of Christianity...
    31 KB (4,667 words) - 00:06, 14 July 2023
  • recommendation that there is a linkage of Scansion & Foot(Prosody) in the Wikipedia database. The Foot (prosody) article already uses some of Scansion as it talks...
    25 KB (3,784 words) - 03:58, 9 February 2024
  • Amsearss (article contribs). Bit odd. Doubly given the added references. Prosody (talk) 08:48, 21 May 2012 (UTC) I deleted it. Crazytonyi (talk) 19:48,...
    6 KB (775 words) - 08:07, 31 January 2024
  • might be best to move them -- the list of feet can happily reside at foot (prosody), which is fairly stubby right now, and the list of hymn meters could either...
    36 KB (5,346 words) - 04:12, 6 February 2024
  • you find in Classical Arabic lexicons like this exist for use in Arabic prosody, words of different metrical feet to fit the meter of a line as needed...
    5 KB (595 words) - 14:59, 28 January 2024
  • minor consequential amendments should be made in the separate articles on prosody. Seadowns (talk) 01:09, 24 February 2021 (UTC|). Since there has been no...
    9 KB (1,500 words) - 08:58, 29 January 2024
  • library.wisc.edu/etext/Jonas/Prosody/Prosody-I.html to http://www.library.wisc.edu/etext/jonas/Prosody/Prosody-I.html Added archive https://web.archive...
    25 KB (3,852 words) - 21:45, 7 February 2024
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