^ ^\-5g&/% r+jjjfcy* ^V^&\ » \>W*\(i),"5jUjua ; the double letters Z, K, $, have the same effect, as rpcnrlZa, a/ma^a, $tya(~i) ; comp. Drac. de metr. 5. 1. Bekk. An. Gr. 822. 12. Necessary Limitations of these Rules. — Hiatus. §.'5. 1. It is sufficiently known from grammar, that the Greek lan- guage, especially the Attic dialect, avoided as much as possible the collision of two open vowels, because this introduced a sort of yawning or gaping into the pronunciation. But at the end of words this impropriety, named from the nature of the thing hiatus (hiatus, xacjUwSi a), was never endured ; comp. Buttmann, Gr. Gr. &. 29. GREEK PROSODY. 5 2. We may safely assume that the Ionic dialect, as being of a softer character, was less offended at such concurrence of vowels. The truth of this is already shewn by Herodotus, if even the most conclusive evidence had not been furnished in the Homeric poems. 3. Yet in modern times, after the example of Bentley, a new expedient, the so-called iEolic digamma, has been applied in defence of the numerous syllables standing open in Ionic poets, on which the necessary information is given by Buttmann, Gr. Gr. §. 6. note 6. Thiersch, Gr. Gr. §. 151. if. This view is founded principally upon the observation, that certain forms and words in Homer, which begin with a vowel, have mostly again a vowel preceding them ; e. g. avafi, zpyov, laoq, olvog, and the like. The further prosecution or modification of the doctrine does not belong to prosody generally, but to the Homeric dia- lect, only mention must be made of it for the better understand- ing of the following. It is certain that neither all the instances of hiatus can be thereby removed out of Homer, as we possess it, nor any single one of the words, usually furnished with the digamma according to the common assumption, be shewn to fol- low a vowel in all Homeric passages ; comp. Spitzner de vers. Gr. Heroic, p. 113, fT. Wolf. Litt. Anal. III. p. 160, f.; and, on the contrary, Boeckh Staatshaushaltung der Athener, II. 384, ff. Regular shortening of Syllables long by nature. %■ 6. 1. On the supposition that the Ionic poets w T ere not so anxi- ous to avoid the collision of two open vowels, it is considered to be no hiatus, or at least a very innocent one, if in Epic metre, which is followed by the Elegiac and Lyric, a long vowel at the end of a word concurs with the vowel of the following word in such a manner, that standing in the thesis of the foot it be- comes short or in the arsis retains its natural length; comp. Herm. Orph. p. 720. ff. de vers. Gr. Her. 107 ff. Thiersch, Gr. Gr. §. 150. 2. Buttmann, Gr. Gr. §. 7. note 26. On the con- ditions under which the tragedians allow themselves to deviate from this rule in the above-mentioned rhythms, see Hermann, El. doctr. metr. 49. On the contrary, the application of hiatus O GREEK PROSODY in dochmiac, anapaestic, and other lyric metres in the same poets, is less restricted, on which see Seidler, de vers. Dochm. 81. 96. Far greater strictness characterizes the Iambic and Trochaic kinds, which, according to the law of the Attic dialect, avoid every collision of vowels at the end of words, and conse- quently do not recognize this licence. 2. According to this principle, every final syllable which is long by reason of a vowel or diphthong, can be made short, if it stands in the thesis, and the next word begins with a vowel • in Epic authors indeed this shortening amounts almost to a constant rule ; e.g. II. 1, 358. fjjiEvrj Iv fievSscraiv — v. 196. aju^a) 6/xwe — v. 23. cjsy^cu awoiva — v. 57. ol S' tTrei(u) ovv — v. 37. k\v$i fxsv, 'ApyvpOTO%i\ 6g — v. 177. at si yap rot ipiq — v. 14. kKr\fi6\ov ' AiroXkbivoQ. Note. — The ancients gave the name arbitrary (Kotvfi) to a syllable shortened in this manner, and numbered these as the first kind of long syllables changed into arbitrary. Drac. de metr. 5. 12. Dionys. Gr. Ar. in Bekker's An. Gr. 633. 16. 3. On the contrary, the long vowel retains its natural measure in this metre, when, as has already been observed, it falls in the arsis of the foot. The reason is easily perceived : in the first case the vowel loses, as it were, a portion of its natural length by the sinking of the voice and by the vowel imme- diately following it; in the other, the elevation of the voice makes the full length strike the ear ; and this opposition proves that the former is not a natural shortness, but produced merely by position. The following Homeric verse, from II. 2, 621. has examples of both kinds : vlsg, 6 fxlv Krsarou, 6 8' ap* HLvpvrov 'AKTopiwvoQ. 4. Nevertheless, the Epic, and, after their example, the Ele- giac poets, sometimes permit the long vowel or diphthong to re- tain its quantity even in the thesis of the foot. It is false that this mostly takes place only in words to which a digamma was originally prefixed. A lengthening of the kind frequently in- deed takes place in Homer before those words, which otherwise suffer an open vowel before them, e. g. hjuiai, as in II. 13, 291. 15, 543. 16, 382. 20, 399. and others ; but the passages are not less numerous in which such lengthenings occur without the GREEK PROSODY. 7 support of the digamma. The following may be observed thereon : a. Such a long quantity enters most rarely in the diphthongs ol and at, and when these do appear as long in such position, except in the fourth foot, their length is owing to the pause introduced by interpunction ; as II. 5, 685. 11, 35. b. In the third foot mostly the separative particle r? (or) alone occurs lengthened in the thesis. c. A greater licence in this kind of measure prevails in the fourth foot ; see De vers. Gr. Her. 107. ff. and on the lengthen- ing of /cat, Hermann on Orph. 728. d. Later authors assume this licence most frequently in proper names, as e. g. Theognis in the often recurring IIoAi>7rcu§?7 ; see v. 25. 57. 79. 129. 143 &c. ; although Gaisford, according to Elmsley's suggestion, measures this form YioXviratSri. 5. Also the long vowel or diphthong with a vowel following is sometimes shortened in the middle of a w r ord. Here, how- ever, a different usage obtains in different poets and dialects. a. Homer has only shortened certain forms of the kind, as tjUTTcuog, 6tog{oi), vlog{vX), xafxatevvadrjg, Od. 10. 243., to which add also ripojog, 6, 303, and the conjunctive fiifiXrjat, II. 11, 380.; see Thiersch, Gr. Gr. §. 168, 3. In kireiri, according to the testimony of the ancients, the reading cVei ^ separate is to be preferred for the Iliad and Odyssee ; see de vers. Gr. Her. 183. But £7T£i77 occurs indisputably in the Horn. Hymn, e. g. to Aphrod. 196. Some other shortenings in the same Hymn, e. g. to Apoll. 69. Koioto{oT) to Demet. 269. ovelap are uncertain ; see Hermann in the passages quoted. b. The Attic dramatic poets have, in the Iambic trimeter, not infrequently shortened oloc, irolog, toiovtoq, rotoade, to which add the peculiarly Attic pronominal forms tovtovi, avrau, as also the verb irotuv and the second person of olofiat oiu ; see Sophocl. Electr. 35. 329. 613. 614. 989. 1013. Hermann, Elem. doctr. metr. 50. 9. Buttm. Gr. Gr. §. 7. note 25. The shorten- ing of the diphthong at is more rare, and occurs in the words SeiXaiog, yepaiog, Kpv(pcuog(ai) in the tragedians, mostly only in anapaestic and dactylic metres ; comp. Seidler de vers, dochm. 100 f. and, on yepaiog, Markland on Eurip. Suppl. 42., yet 8 GREEK PROSODY. deiXaiog is several times shortened by Aristophanes even in the trimeter; e. g. Plut. 850. Vesp. 81. Some other cases of the kind in Attic authors are still more disputed, as 7rarp^og and Ziorj, for which Porson, on Eurip. Hecub. 81. 1089. Med. 431. will every where restore Trarpiog and Zo{], and to him Elmsley, on Eurip. Bacch. 1365. Med. 420. 946. unconditionally assents, but on the contrary, Matthise, on Hecub. 78, and Hermann, in the review of Elmsley's Medea, 362, have defended the shortening of irarpt^ oc ; the former view appears to be perfectly correct, as Homer already uses QvaiZoog ala ; comp. Naeke on Chceril. 183. c. The Bucolic poets, as Theocritus, likewise shorten rotovrog, ttoielv, and -rrpwav ; see Id. xi. 18. iv. 60. xv. 15. Yet Kiessling, according to the suggestion of Graefe, Ep. Crit. in Bucol. 20. 66., has invariably written wouv, which some grammarians de- signate as a Dorism ; see Jacobs on Anth. Pal. 604. On the shortenings in Pindar see Bceckh de metr. Pind. ii. 289. d. The Comic, later Epic and Epigrammatic poets have pro- ceeded the farthest in this shortening of long syllables, using besides ttoluv, Asclepiad. 8. 3. (A. P. ii. 462.), tolovtov Hedyl. 4. 3. (A. P. ii. 765.), roXride Democrit. A. P. ii. 680, also at fre- quently short, as in ayopcuog, Atac(T) 3 ficuog, "Ep/mcuog, iraXcuog, &c. ; comp. Jacobs on A. P. 263. 361. 518., Animadvers. on Athenseus. 113. 133. 169, so the diphthong a in £7ra?7, where it is not remarkable, but also in 'A\<}>u6g, r Ep/jLSLOv(u), QaXsia ; see Jacobs on A. P. 244. 580. 944., and in like manner y\ in Sri'iogtf) and vrj'i, comp. the same as above 153. 379. In support of the former of these Homeric authority might be adduced, were it not there easier to explain the difficulty by synizesis ; see de vers. Gr. Heroic. 187. 190. Note 1. — It is evident from what has been stated, that the shortening takes place most frequently in the diphthongs ol and m, which, as is known from grammar, are not re- garded as a full long quantity in the thesis of the tone. Hence the ancients attribute to .the article el, al only 1| time ; see Bekk. An. Gr. 821. 29. But probably this short- ening was produced by the position of a vowel before a vowel, as in the cases adduced under 2 ; although, as Butt- GREEK PROSODY. 9 maim in the passage already quoted explains the thing, the last vowel in some cases might not be heard in the pronun- ciation. The assumption of Gcettling Theodos. 247. that the genuine Attic, in these cases, is yepaog, dsiXaog appears to me objectionable for this reason, that the Attics, on such omission of the i, nevertheless usually pronounced the sylla- ble long, as in the familiar 'aerog, tcXaiofa), icaw(a), &c. Note 2. — The shortening of a diphthong or long vowel before a consonant wants internal evidence, and has there- fore been almost unanimously rejected by the principal scho- lars; see particularly Bentley on Callim. to Zeus, 87. Dor- ville, Vannus Critic. 384. f. Hence such licence can only be excused in poets of the latest date, who had before their eyes corrupt passages of earlier works ; see Jacobs on A. P. 35. 40. 928. A necessary exception, however, is formed by the diphthong oy, when it arises from the Latin short u, as Uoarovjuiog ; see Jacobs on A. P. 631. 926. Note 3. — Another mode of contracting two vowels into one syllable is synizesis, in which form either two shorts, or a short and a long, or lastly two long vowels, are pro- nounced together in one syllable. Of the last mentioned mode the contractions of r}, £77, firi, lird before ov are the most usual ; see Thiersch, Gr. Gr. §. 149. Buttmann, Gr. Gr. §. 29. note 6. Hermann, El. doctr. metr. 52. 12. de vers. Graec. He- roic. 179. ff. Note 4. — Hereto is allied crasis, together with its colla- teral figures, by means of which the vowel or diphthong standing at the end of a word is combined with the one beginning the next into one blended sound, as Kayd>, rovvojuia for ical lyw, rb ovofia. The use of this in Epic writers is limited; see Thiersch, Gr. Gr. §. 165. de vers. Graec. He- roic. 176. ff., but with the Attics very extensive, and still re- quires much accurate examination. Comp. especially Her- mann, Elem. doctr. 50. 11. Buttmann, Gr. Gr. as above, note 9. ff. Wolf. Litter. Anal. ii. 439. ff. Reisig. Syntagm. critic. 20. ff. 10 GREEK PROSODY. Nearer Definition of Length by Position. §.7. 1. It has been stated above, §. 4. 4. that two consonants, im- mediately following a vowel, cause it to be long. The Greek language, more strict in this respect than the Latin, also mostly lengthens the short vowel at the end of a word, when the next begins with two consonants, which is of rarer occurrence in the Roman poets ; so Eurip. Iphig. in Taur. 7. Kvaviav aXa , \, Sr, because these never admit of being doubled in the pronun- ciation. Note 2. — The later Epic and the Epigrammatic poets adopt the long quantity mostly according to Homeric models ; see Hermann as above; Jacobs on A. P. 70. 186. 484. Note 3. — The Attics in Iambic trimeter sometimes lengthen the short syllable before p, as Sophocl. Antig. 704. irapa{a) pdSpoiai; in the measures which approach nearer to the Epic dialect other syllables also occur lengthened ; see ibid. 14 GREEK PROSODY. 134. Hermann, El. doctr. metr. 45. Markland on Enrip. Supplic. 94. Elmsley on Eurip. Iphig. in Taur. p. 199, Leipz. edit. Lengthening of short Syllables in the beginning of Words. §. 10. Not only at the end but also in the beginning of words, espe- cially where two or more shorts follow, the Epic language lengthens a short or doubtful vowel by the arsis. Here the fol- lowing cases may be distinguished : a: It happens least frequently that a pure short is made long, as Od. 7, 119. Zlcpvptr). 1*2, 423. "lirirovog. 9, 425. , 'ot£e. b. Far oftener are the doubtful vowels a, i, v, measured long in the arsis of a tetrasyllable or longer word ; e. g. in the fami- liar adjectives 'aSavarog, ^FiKafiarog, 'avEcpeXog, 'airaXafJiog, and in verbs, as 'awovkaSca, ^aTro^uofiai, "(nroTr£(jriv, and dloXov "ocfriv, in the termination of the verse, II. 12, 208. For further and more minute particulars see Hermann, El. doctr. metr. 43 ; compare 354. De vers. Gr. Her. sic. 72. if. Thiersch, Gr. Gr. §. 174. 4. ff. Lengthening of a short Syllable in the middle of Words. §.n. 1. Lastly, this lengthening occurs also in the middle of com- pound words, namely, when the latter part begins with a liquid letter; as Od. 9, 291. ^Lafiik€i(jrl{a). v. 490. KaravEVbJv. 14, 226. KarapiynXa. It is certain indeed here that this letter, where not written double, was at least doubled in the pronunciation, and GREEK PROSODY. 15 that thus the lengthening was produced. Hence in these and similar cases both modes of writing, with the single and the double consonant, occur. But in short vowels and words at least, as "aXriKrog, "eXafizv, &c. it will be more correct to write aXXrjKTog, eXXajdsv ; see De vers. Gr. Her. 79. ff. Thiersch, Gr. Gr. §. 147. Buttmann, Gr. Gr. §. 7. note 27. By any one who would reject the doubling of the consonant in such cases as unnecessary, and measure the short syllable long solely through the influence of the accent, examples of a totally different kind ought necessarily to be brought forward for this assertion ; but so long as "l^cuctv, "a/catpoc, and the like are not pointed out, the reduplication may be defended. 2. Also the tragedians have now and then allowed themselves lengthenings of the kind, especially in proper names, as 'l-mro- jue^wv ; comp. Hermann, El. doctr. metr. 445. 3. The lengthening in the middle of the word before other than liquid letters is disproportionately rare, and mostly only in polysyllabic words, as in II. 16, 174. ACnrErtog. Apollonid. 6. 2. (A. P. i. 502.) Aidfyavaog. 11.21,329. a7ro£pa-a£, where usually recourse is had to the aid of the digamma ; see De vers. Gr. Heroic. 86. Lengthening of a short Syllable in the Thesis. §.12. 1. On the possible lengthenings of a short syllable in the thesis of the foot, where, in Heroic measure, chiefly the vowel i often appears long in words of the feminine gender in 7a, as II. 2, 573. r Ywspri(jiriv(T). 9, 73. virod£^ir}(T), see Hermann, El. doct. metr. 56. 14. de vers. Grsec. Heroic. 83 f. Thiersch, Gr. Gr. 148. 1. 2. Buttmann, Gr. Gr. as above, note 23. But indeed the long quantity occurs so frequently in this class of words, that it becomes doubtful whether the syllable is not by nature common ; upon this we shall farther treat below. 2. The termination of words is used long in the thesis much more rarely. Here the fourth foot has the licence of most readily changing a prosodiacal short into a long, as II. 11, 36. j3Aocru- pu)7rlg £arT£(f)av(i)TO. Od. 3, 382. (3ovv rivlv, tvpvfAETWTrov. For the cases in which the ancients considered syllables of the kind 16 GREEK PROSODY. long, see De vers. Gr. Heroic. 82. Hermann, El. doctr. metr. 40. 7. Thiersch, Gr. Gr. §. 148. 3. 4. This circumstance, to allude to it cursorily, makes materially against the opinion of those who suppose that only a spondee formed by nature and not by position can stand in the fourth foot of a hexameter ; as gene- rally this rule is founded rather upon the usage of later poets. 3. In other passages either the strength of the breathing, or the pause occurring after an interpunction, as II. 17, 142. w E»crop, eldog apicrrE, or a following liquid letter, as 22, 91. 7roXXa(a) Xkjgo/ulzvu). 24, 755. 7roXXa(a) pvGTaZ,z ly-^da, ly\dr\, iXey^da, iXey^eiri, bvzt&da, bvzibdr)', comp. Etym. M. 313. 21. d. In adjectives of three terminations in dog, da, uov, as (3po- rda, Topyda, ravpeia, Oppian. Hal. II. 528. ptirriv, ravpdrjv, see Reg. Pr. 24. On the contrary, in Quintus Smyrnaeus, III. 239. cMTiriSa 7roi»Xuj3o£tov must be read instead of 7rovXvj56eiav. e. In words which are oxytone, e. g. the radical forms Z>ua(a), C 2 20 GREEK PROSODY. irap tea (a), and the like ; or derivatives, as apua(a), 0opj3aVTa\ia(a), and adjectives, as aXiog, ta, iov, iroXtog m(a), lov ; see Drac. 20. 22. 57. 10. Reg. Pr. 78. 84. Note. — Later poets sometimes allow themselves to shorten words, in violation of this rule ; see Jacobs, A. P. 926. On the contrary, in the older poets the Ionic form, where it is abandoned, should always be restored, as in Dionys. Perieg. 647. sTTLovvfiiriv is to be read; comp. 1098. 6. In like manner the rare words in oa (most of them length- ened into oia), as oxytone and paroxytone, have the final vowel long, e. g. Troa(a), arod(a) ; comp. Arcad. de ace. 100. 11. Note.— As regards the Attic usage it is probable, that in the poets the nominative likewise ended in rj, as ttoy), ttvoy) ; see Elmsley, Eurip. Heracl. 481. Also the compound forms of this kind, together with those formed from vovg, have tj, as 'Apcri- voy}, Avtovot), "2,vr}, and the like 5 comp. Lo- beck, Phrynich. 302. The few, in which a remains, have it long ; e. g. yva, icapva, olava, 6E,va, aiKva, Arcad. de ace. 109. 19. Yet here also the usage fluctuates, as in Eurip. Heracl. 394. we find 6i\oic£pdua, see Drac. demetr. 57. 16. Arcad. de ace. • 2 24 GREEK PROSODY. 195. 18. Et. M. 462. 14. The ancients state expressly that the Attics said (a with a long final syllable, and ua with a short one, as EvfiaOeia and tv/maO'ia, although in individual forms the latter only is explained as Attic. This shortening is preserved in the tragedians almost invariably, and not rarely also in the Epigrammatic poets, thus Soph. Antig. 916. Su0a, /uLaXOa, &c. shorten the termination, toge- ther with genuine Greek forms in Sa, e. g. apda. This is clear also from irpia^a. 7. The termination Xa has usually the short vowel (a) in words of two or more syllables, in which a double X precedes a, as |3&'XXa, S^XXa, ^XXa, fymXXa, Quint. Smyrn. 11. 156. ^/ceX- Xa, 0ueXXa, to which also the polysyllabic feminine proper names belong ; comp. Drac. 86. 12. Reg.Pr. 92. Arcad. de ace. 96. 19., 28 GKEEK PROSODY. so Crinagoras, 3. 2. (A. P. V. 119.) rVXXav. Antipat. Thess. (A. P. V. 3.) XpiHjiWa. (b) In those with a simple X pre- ceded by the diphthong av, when they are properispome or pro- paroxytone, as vavXa, avairavXa, iravXa, the last also as a femi- nine proper name. Diodor. 8. 6. (A. P. VII. 700.) ; comp. Reg. Pr. 19. Note 1. — The Homeric poems, except Od. 12. 235. have always Sk-uXXrj; see De vers. Gr. Heroic. 32. but 2icuXXa ywi], Callim. fr. 184. Meleag. 77. 4. Note 2. — On the omission of one of the liquid letters, where this admits of being done, the final syllable becomes long, as fiaKiXr}. Hesiod. Op. 470. Ar. Phoen. 8. Note 3. — In forms where another consonant precedes X, grammarians prefer the termination 17, as d/uixXy, »«X^> rpiyXr}; see Piers. Moer. Att. 184. Yet in certain words the other is not without example, as e. g. rpiyXa, with a short final syllable in Opp. H. 1. 98. Apollonid. 7. 1. (A. P. VI. 105.) 8. Of the termination jua no examples occur in the old Epic language, 17 being alone admitted. Yet certain forms had both readings, as Sip/na and ^£p/xrj, roX/da and toXjuyj, where in the first case the final syllable was short, as Eurip. Hec. 1099. Opp. C. 3. 431. Topjxav. Lycoph. 262; see also Arcad. de ace. 96. 18. Lobeck, Phryn. 330. f. 9. The termination va is short in the following cases : a. When the diphthong at, u, or 01 precedes, as Spaicaiva, Aaiauva, juvpaiva, j3ov7T£tva, ripuva, ^icnroiva, &c. b. The ancients add those that have two liquid con- sonants before the termination, as yivva, AUrvvva, /nipi/uLva, Mj^vfiva, ^fivpva, Ao^uva, Opp. c. 1.4. KepKivva, Dion. Perieg. 480. So also proper names, as "Yipivva, QiXivva. In the tra- gedians, yzvza{a) and yivva, are frequently interchanged ; see Porson, Eurip. Hec. 161. Elmsley, Iphig. in Taur. 153. Seid- ler de vers. Dochm. 82. 345. c. The Latin names in iva, e. g. 'lovvrTva, 2aj3?va, $>avvpd. KoXXvpd(v) y Aristoph. Pac. 123. is long in both syllables; comp. Reg. Pr. 79. Arcad. de ace. 194. 17. g. Proper names with a double p before the termination are short, as Kippd and Uvppd; "Zappa, in Greg. Nazianz. Ep. 52. 1. Note, — That the still prevailing reading aydg, and some others, as e.g. array dg, which appeared in several forms ; see Buttm. Gr. Gr. §. 56. note 1 ; and especially Lobeck, in Wolf's Litterar. Annal. III. 41. f. Their 1 GREEK PROSODY. 33 length has already been noticed by the ancients, as Etym. M. 553. 24. and is confirmed by the usage of the poets, as Apoll. Arg. 1. 1350. "YAa fiopov. Theocr. Id. VII. 11. BpamXd. Theogn. 1088. Evpiora. Also this measure agrees with the constant length of these cases in the first declension. Note. — In like manner the Doric genitive of words in rig, when it ends in a, is long, as ' Arpeidd, alxjuriTa, Alpheus Messen. Ep. 11. 3. (A. P. App. 358) ; see Etym. M. 154. 2. In certain instances these remain the prevailing forms even in the Attic dialect ; see Matthias, Gr. Gr. §. 64. note 4. Bast. Ep. Cr. 49. 5. The dual of the first declension has long a in all the like cases, as a\yjxr\Ta{a), 'Ar^et^a, &c. ; see Drac. 109. 18. Reg. Pr. 148. Measure of a in the Termination of the other two Declensions, §• 20.' 1. a is always short in neuters plural of the second and in the singular and plural of words of the third declension, as ?vXa, Bio/ua, fr° m K ^ £ '°C and \piog. Drac. 101. 22. defends the shortness of these forms ; on the contrary, Thiersch, Gr. Gr. §. 193, 35. considers them as decidedly long. D 34 GREEK PROSODY. Buttm. Gr. Gr. §. 53. note 4. pronounces more cautiously, and indeed the shortness, which may be explained by the omis- sion of one c, cannot entirely; be got over. For although in the Homeric passages, II. 9, 189. 524. Od. 8. 73. k\&i avSpiov, it may depend upon position before a vowel, yet many examples are found in which this is not the case, as ApolL Arg. 4, 36. iraTQr\v re, \zkia te /Jisyapijjv. Christodor. Ecphr. icXia <£wrwv. Paul. Silentiar. Ecphr. Magn. Aed. 4. ic\£a ar'/jUfpov. Quint. Smym. 13, 474. aicXea iravra, and numerous others. d. As great or even greater difficulty attends the determination of the quantity of a, formed from a a, in neuters in ae, as in ytpa, K£pa, Kpia, in which the ancients themselves point out instances of decided length; comp. Drac. 116, 16. Reg. Pr. 56. Hephsestion and his Scholia in Gaisford. These are partly fol- lowed by the modems, as Buttm. Gr. Gr. §. 54. and Thiersch, Gr. Gr. §. 188., who are disposed to consider the length in these forms as regular, and the shortness as a poetic licence. On the whole, this view, already suggested by the ancients, may be the more correct one, as Ktpa, at least, furnishes no example of shortness, which can be referred to with certainty ; for in Homer it always stands before a vowel, where, therefore, although long, it necessarily becomes short by position; and Quint. Smym. 14, 499. uses it long before a consonant; zgOevov a/ufo Ktpa, XsXnjjuivot, On the contrary, the passages not infre- quently occurring in Homer with an elided form, as Od. 3. 65. 470. Kps vwipTepa leave no doubt that a could be used short. Add to this its short usage before a consonant, as in Callim. to Art. 88. Kpia Xvjkoq. Theocr. Id. 7. 108. Kpia tvtOcl, where the Bucolic rhythm guards us against the use of a synizesis by which it has been attempted to rescue many Homeric passages, and even in the tragedians, as Eurip. Cycl. 126. In like manner yipa, which Buttm. cites, is shortened in Epic authors, as II. 2. 237. 9. 334. A. P. VI. 42. 3., while in Soph. El. 436. it lengthens the final vowel. For all these reasons it may be right to assume, that these forms, to which c^eVa, crcpiXa, ripa, and the like, also belong, were of arbitrary measure, as either the two a might be blended together into one long one, or the termination shortened by the rejection of the second, which GREEK PROSODY. 35 agrees also with what is said by grammarians on Kpla ; so be- sides the above-mentioned, Nicand. Ther. 186. has ripa before a consonant. The shortness will not appear contrary to all analogy, if we compare such forms with yovva and Sovpa, which are decidedly short, and recognised by Porson, Eurip. Phcen. 866. as Attic. Indeed Elmsley, Med. 318. will not recognise them, but his objections are fully answered by Her- mann in Annot. on Elmsley's edition of the Medea, P. 360. Lips. Ed. 2. As a rule, a is short in the accusative of the third declen- sion, as av^pa, Qripr)Tr}pa, Xtfi&va, UovXvdafxavra, &c Drac. 112. 14. Reg. Pr. 88. a. In forms in evg the accusative in a is usually long, as JLvpvaOtvQ "EiVpvadza, Upzvg hpta, (povevg ov£a thrice in Eurip. as a tribrach ; see Porson, Eurip. Hec. Seidler, Electr. 594. In like manner Epic authors, it is well known, not infrequently use a short when a short vowel precedes. Yet here the blending into one long syllable by synizesis is still more common, Lo- beck, Soph. Aj. 104. Monk, Eurip. Ale. 25. b. Accusatives in a, formed by contraction from nominatives in evg, are likewise long, as 'Eperpia, ^oa, from 'Epcrpteue, \ozvg, so in Soph. Phil. 4. MijXm; comp. Et. M. 189. 57. 670. 4. Buttm. Gr. Gr. 53. 2. c. This accusative is also long in proper names derived from kXzoq, when formed by contraction, as Soph. Antig. 23. 194. 'EreojcAta, although in this case the above-mentioned blend- ing into one syllable often takes place, as Aristoph. Av. 1391. 'HpajcXca. The Epic authors mostly retain in these forms the measure given under a, but the double short is also common with them, Theocr. Id. 12, 89. Aiok\&. Callim. Ep. 65, 5. 'Hpa/cXsa. d. Lastly, among these must be ranked adjectives of a similar form as cWjcXer/f cW/cXetoe Swor/cXfa, evtyvrjQ bvQvwq svtyva, vTrep- §£7/C vwepSea, which naturally lengthen the final vowel ; comp. Drac. 114. 4. Reg. Pr. 143. On the other hand, it ought not to D 2 36 GREEK PROSODY. surprise us, if aicXta and (W/cXta, according to the above given analogy of kXzoq, are shortened. In Homer, indeed, II. 2. 115. dvaicXta "Apyog iicicrSat, and Od. 4. 728. a/cXta Ik /j.zyap(i)v, these two stand only before a vowel, and are defended by Thiersch, Gr. Gr. §. 193. 39. on that ground, but in Quest. Smym. 3. 363. the position of aicXta Zav puts the matter beyond dispute, as also that of tvicXia, in Soph. CEd. T. 161 ; see Porson, Advers. 168. Jacobs, Anth. p. 290. 905. Hence the shortening of such forms in the neuter plural can also be tolerated, as Tryphiod. 125. a\pia yripcKncovrag, although the long quantity is more re- gular, Soph. CEd. Col. 1430. ravSsa Xiyeiv. 3. The dative in a of neuters, in ag is long, as yjjpa, SItt^, i\(*)v yovewv may be defended, although by an easy change it could be read \a$pr) ewv yoveuv. Note 3. — Also the Doric particles ov$afia(a) and fxr]dafjia(a) are short in the poets of this class, as Theocr. X. 18. Exam- ples occur also with the Attics; see Brunck, iEschyl. Pr. 429. 4. a is short in the prepositions and particles, e. g. r/vuca, irr^viKa, Sia(a) 9 (cara(a), &c. ; comp. Et. M. 75. 19. Note. — In the Doric dialect cu/ca occurs for aiKe with a long final syllable ; see Drac. 16. 5. Hence also oku for ore xe may be assumed as long; Kiessling, Theocr. Id. 4. 21. 8. 68. The objections started by Grsefe, Ep. cr. Bucol. 39. have at least not refuted the assumption, although trotta, aXXofca, oTTiroKa, for wore, ciXXore, o7r7roT£, remain short. Measure of a in the termination of Verbs. §.22. 1. The terminations of the perfect and first aorist active have a always short, as is already indicated by the constant pro- paroxytone accent of these tenses, as fVXerySci, eStoKa, Keicpv^a, \e\onra, TrefyvKa. So also in the forms which are properispome, as cuprjKa, irapriKa, &c. ; see Et. M. 176. 41. 2. The same measure belongs to the Ionic or poetic appended syllable aSa of the second person, evSiicrSa, ySeicrSa, fcXatoia-Sa, &c. This remains even when the form loses a syllable by syn- cope, as in the familiar olaSa. The same obtains of forms in ojueSa, e. g. Tvirrofxe^a, and where p£ap (well), lengthened the final syllable with the Attics; see also Buttm. Gr. Gr. §.41. notes 11 and 14. Yet in Epic authors Qpiap retains the short a, as in Horn. II. 21. 197. (pprfara. H. to Demet. 99. Qpiari, for which Callim. H. to Demet. 16. puts priri by contraction of the two vowels. Exactly similar is the contraction in tap and iciap, which change into the monosyllabic rjp and K^p ; com- pare Et. M. in the given passage ; in the latter of these the old Epic uses the contracted, but in the former the resolved form ; while the tragedians, on the contrary, have mostly Kf ap with two shorts. Examples of the lengthening of fypiap by the Attics are given in Maltby's Morell's Thesaur. exxx. 42 GEEEK PROSODY. Measure of ap in the termination of Adverbs. §.27. Adverbs or conjunctions of this termination likewise shorten the final syllable, as acpap, sWap, avTap(a) ; see Reg. Pr. 37. Et M. 172,33. Hence also yap(a) (for) is properly short, although before 61 and similar words it very often occurs long in Epic language through the force of the following breathing, as Dor- ville Vannus Crit. p. 391. ff. has already pointed out. Note. — In like manner adverbs derived from rj/uap are short, according to the analogy of the primitive word ; as avrrnuap, Ivv^fiap, iravvriinap ; see Et. M. 343. 46. Measure of the final syllable ag in declension. §. 28. 1. In the nominative of the first or third declension the ter- mination ag is long in the following cases : a. In words in ag of the first declension, which have a vowel or p before the termination, as Alveiag, Fopytag, Ao&dg, JJv9a- yopag, &c. ; comp. Drac. 109. 1. Reg. Pr. 4. b. In forms in ag, gen. a, as ( 'Y\ag a, ayag and the like, whether paroxytone or perispome; see §. 19. 4. Reg. Pr. 12. 8., so BovK£(pa\ag, Opp. C. 1. 230. c. In paroxytones in ag, avrog, of the third declension, as A'ldg, 'AQctfiag, Oodg, AaoSafnag, £\i(j>ag, to which join also the participles in ag, as rv\pdg, -rrXi^dg, Treplfiag, comp. Drac. 87. 16. 112. 17. Reg. Pr. 5. Eustath. II. 11. 423. 854. 24. d. To the same class belong the two oxytones 6 ljuag{a) (thong) and 6 avdpiag(d) (statue), which are therefore frequently adduced by grammarians as exceptions; comp. Drac. 12. 9. 41. 25. Arcad. de ace. 21. 3. e. The few proper names or other words in dg, gen. dvrog, as FXiaadg avrog, according to the Et M. 234. 19., and the ad- jective irdg iravrog, have long a. f. In like manner words in ag arog, compounded from Kepav- vvfxi, as aXiKpdg, fxeXUpag, YaAjcoKpac ', comp. Drac. 12. 11. Arcad. de ace. 21. 5. 193. 15. Yet here an uncertainty still prevails respecting the accentuation, many of the old gramma- 1 GREEK PROSODY. 43 rians, and with them the Et. M. 3. 42., making these forms oxytone; so Asclepiad. Ep. 5. 4. (A. P. XII. 105.) has ov iro\- Xotc evKpdc(d), Add to these also Kpag{d) Kpdrog (head) ; see §. 43. 8. a. g. Lastly, the two adjectives fiiXag and raXag, the ignorance of whose quantity has now and then given rise to rash corrup- tions of poetic passages, are long. Besides what is adduced by Graefe, Ep. Cr. Buc. 9. f. the Et. M. 575. 23. also, and Const. Lasc. 237. 25. assert the length of these forms, and are sup- ported by poetic usage; comp. Od. 1. 423. Dionys. Perieg. 416. Quint. Sm. 6. 651. 10. 194., from which passage Grsefe, as above, erroneously quotes fiiyag as an example of the long quantity, although Hermann, Orph. 715. had already proposed the correct reading. Note 1. — For there is no question that the words Xdag and imtyag, so frequently mentioned by grammarians as excep- tions, always shortened the final syllable ; see Reg. Pr. 3. Arcad. de ace. 193. 10. and above, §. 23. 4. b. although Xdag can be made long by contraction into Xdg ; see Peg. Pr. 127. The shortness of fiiyag is noticed by Porson, Eurip. Phoen. 1688. Note 2. — When in other instances any of the forms in ag, adduced as long, are found shortened, this must be consi- dered as a licence of the Doric dialect, and can only occur in the poets who either wrote in that dialect, or did not altogether disdain it. As an example of such a short quan- tity, the ancients, as Drac. 12. 4. 64. 10. quote from Hesiod. Theog. 521. $r)7 fiovvov. 3. Datives of the third declension have i short in both num- 46 GREEK PROSODY. bers, as avBp'itf) avSpaai, KvkXwtti KvkXw^T, see Drac. 11*2. 21.; so in the Ionic form of the first and second declension plural, as TraXa/uyort, %,v\oi 5. The i appended by the Attics to pronouns is always long, as outo(ti{~i), 6St(7), &c. ; see Drac. 106. 17. Reg. Pr. 124. Et. M. 341. 44. Buttm. Gr. Gr. §. 60. 6. So always in the later poets, Agath. Schol. A. P. IV. 3. 33. raim(7) fxlv ovv epsi rig. 6. The neuter of the interrogative and indefinite pronoun Tt'c(?) rt(t) (who), and rtc(t) rt(t) (any one) is short; so also its compounds, as ovtl, /dijrX, ort, &c. Note. — On the unusual pronoun of the third person i, which Drac. 106. 14. adduces as short, see Buttm. Gr. Gr. §. 72. 3. note, and Et. Gud. 278. 6. The dual forais van(i) and a(j>(o'i(T) are also short, as is shewn by the accent. Measure of i in the end of Adverbs and Prepositions. §.31. 1. Adverbs ending in i are of variable measure, and the an- cients themselves fluctuated in the determination of the indi- GREEK PROSODY. 47 vidual cases ; the following may be assumed as decidedly short : a. Dissyllables, either derived from other forms or indepen- dent, M, vuixh oi>xW, H^> tfi ; comp. Drac. 69. 7. Et. M. 607. 18. Apollon. de adv. 545. 17. b. Numeral adverbs in ig or iv, the last consonant of which can be rejected by the poets, as iroXXaia, irXziaraKi, t%aici, &c. for ttoWciklq, 7rX. £?. Et. M. 169. 31. So a\gt, pzxpi, X^P^ for jiwpid®, a X ptc, &c. Et. M. 169. 20. Apollon. de adv. 573. 2. ; and lastly, voor^t, 7raXi, for voatfuv, 7toXlv. c. Adverbs of place in &, as avroSt, Kopt vSoSt, oiko&i, ku&, &c. ; see Et. M. as above. Apollon. de adverb, 573. 14. d. Oxytones in ti, derived from verbs in £w, as AwpicrriCt), "IckjtHj), 2vptlv and \piv, see Fischer on Weller as above, 213. Buttm. Gr. Gr. §. 72. note 20. The dual forms, vto'iv and atywiv, if not contracted into one syllable, shorten the termination ; see Apollon. de pronom. 369. Arcad. de ace. 143. 8. ; with the poets, at least the Epic, this is the predominant usage, as II. 8. 402. 413. 416. Apoll. Arg. 2. 250. Theocr. Id. XII. 11. Therefore when instances of the lengthened quantity occur, they depend upon the arsis ; see de vers. Gr. Her. 48. Lastly, in the Doric dialect the singular also of these pro- nouns had the same termination, namely, ^utv(t), rav(7), and Tiv(V) ; see Fischer on Weller II. 209. Apollon. de pronom. 364. ff. The length of tlv(T) is remarked by Drac. 87. 4. in reference to Theocr. Id. III. 33. comp. XV. 89. Erinna, 2. 1. Also the two others, conformably to their regular analogy, appear to have been usually long, although tuv occurs in Homer only before a consonant, not only in the Odyssee, but also, which Thiersch, Gr. Gr. §. 204. 4. has overlooked, in the II. 11. 201., where the Venet. Schol. makes allusion to the long quantity. On i^i'iv Buttmann, Gr. Gr. §. 72. note 13. hesitates in deciding on account of Theocr. Id. V. 18. But there the reading Ifiiv appears to be spurious ; see Kiessling on the passage. On the unusual and GREEK PROSODY. 51 almost obsolete en or ¥v, which belongs to the third person, comp. Bceckh, Not. crit. on Pindar. Pythic. 4. 36. Nem. 2. 66. and the scholars cited by him. 2. The syllable iv is long in the Attic lengthened pronominal forms ovto(tiv(~l), £KEivoaiv(T), &c, as has also been stated above, §.31. of the forms without v ; comp. Drac. 106. 19. Buttm. Gr. Gr. §. 80. 6. Measure of the syllable iv out of declension. §.35. 1. Adverbs in iv are usually short; e. g. vocrcfnv, iraXiv, 7rptv(t), &c. This is shewn of the two former by the short forms v6(j(JH, iraXty mentioned in §. 31. 1. b. ; for 7rpiv(t) the Et. M. 405. 33. testifies, as also the usual short usage with the Attics^ as Sophocl. Trach. 2. Eurip. Heracl. 552. 860. Note. — Perhaps, however, it cannot well be denied that 7TQLV was sometimes lengthened by the older Epic authors even in the thesis, although this has been doubted ; see Herm. Orph. 700 f. For, in the first place, the same long quantity is found in JEsch. Prom. 481. 769., although here also the correctness of the reading has been disputed ; see Blomfield on the passage : secondly, the Doric npav appears to point to a probably long or common form in the primitive language ; see also Jacobs, A. P. 489. 2. It is evident that the termination iv is shortened also in verbs, wherever it occurs, which already follows from the cir- cumstance that the consonant v can be omitted. Measure of the syllable ig in the end of words. — Measure in declension. §.36. The termination ig, in the third declension, is long and short. It is long : a. In words which form the genit. in ivog. Of these gram- marians assume a double termination, iv and ig, in opposition to which Buttmann, Gr. Gr. §. 41. note 4, has attempted to shew, that in most of these cases ig was originally the prevalent termination, although c^A^tv, SzXcpig, and some others, inter- change. The same is laid down by Eustathius on Od. 3. 5. E 2 52 GREEK PROSODY. 1453. 16. Hence coctiq, yAw^e? Oig, ig, pig, Tpr}\k, &c. (7) are long ; comp. Drac. 81. 5. Reg. Pr. 15. Arcad. de ace. 193. 5., e. g. Theocr. XI. 35. plg(l) liri x e & ei - Eurip. Heracl. 193. Tjoa- Xk®, Diogen. Laert. (A. P. VII. 87.) Za\apig(i) , &c. Note. — The paroxytone adjectives compounded from these retain the long termination : e, g. evplg, ygvaaviTig, apiaru)- Sig, thus apiGTioSlvog Christodor. Ecphr. 391. Nonn. 9. 148. tvw&vi, Coluth. 281. Nonn. Dion. 9. 24., &c. ; see Drac. 88. 19. Et. M. 395. 36. b. The termination ig, gen. tOog, is long, as ay\ig, SeWig, piping, opvig; comp. Drac. 10. 11. 34. 1. Et. M. 632. 3. Arcad. de ace. 196. 6., so Horn. Od. 10 23. plpjmi^i. Hence the accent in yeXyWtg Crinagor. 6. 7. (A. P. VI. 232.) is irregular, unless, as others suppose, it is to be read yeXylSeg. Note. — On the lengthening of opvig, which the ancients denominate Attic, as Reg. Pr. 118. Drac. 71. 7. Et. M. as above, it appears reasonable to assume a double form, opvig, 7%og, 7v, and also opvtog, Xv. This alone can explain the frequent variation in the measure of this word, examples of which have already been adduced, De vers. Gr. Her. 50. The later Epic writers commonly use both forms opvig and opvtv short ; the Attics, on the contrary, interchangeably : thus Aristoph. has, Av. 16. 270. 287. opvtg, 335. opvtv ; again, v. 70. 103. opvig, v. 73. opvlv, and so repeatedly in this play. Also the yet extant plural opvug testifies this ; see Buttm. Gr. Gr. §. 58. p. 236. Therefore the declaration of Porson, in Hecub. 208, that opvig is always long in Aristo- phanes, still admits of dispute. c. The monosyllables \lg(J) (lion), and Kig(7) (moth), are long ; see Drac. 36. 14. Reg. Pr. 57. Arcad. de ace. 192. 3. Only on the accentuation of the former, namely, whether it should be written \(g or Xig, and in the accusative \iv or \tv, a great dif- ference of opinion prevailed among the ancients: the former was defended by Aristarchus, the latter by Ptolemseus of Asca- lon; comp. Eustath. and the Venet. Schol. on II. 11. 32. 239. Et. M. 567. 6. Theod. Gramm. 201. 20. and Wolf. Litt. Anal. 4. 408. note; see also Theocr. Id. XIII. 6. 62. Also the adjective \ig{7) (smooth) is long. Od. 12. 79. GREEK PROSODY. 53 Note. — On the long forms in ig, idog, see below, 2. d. note. d. Nominatives and accusatives contracted from izg and tag are long, as opvlg, ocfig, -jroXig ; comp. Drac. 114. 23. 2. On the contrary, the termination ig of the third declension is short under the following conditions. a. In all words in ig, except the monosyllables mentioned in 1. c.> which have Att. the genit. etvg, Ion. tog, as \vig(j) ; to which add xapt'e(7), from Od. 24. 230. fiarpaxigCt), from Nicand. Theriac. 416. pr)y\g(l) zTrucdaSto. On the contrary of those above-mentioned rev^idog(T) occurs short in Nicand. Alex. 471. Theaetet. Scholast. Ep. 2. 12. (A. P. X. 16). Nicander has also Alex. 546. 7rAoKa/zte(7), /uLtXafjLipijipig, fxovoKpi]7rig, ravvKpf]7r~ig, as it should be read Et. M. 184. 8 ; see Drac. 41. 13. Reg. Pr. 118. Eustath. Od. 2. 119. 14. 37. 50. On the accentuation alone the ancients were at issue, some wishing to paroxytone all these words according to the general rules of accentuation in compounds, while others made those which oc- curred only in the feminine gender oxytone; see Spohn, as above, 190. ff. AiK\(g(X), SucX$oe(t), which Drac. 56. 18. Et. M. 518. 21. Eustath. as above, have already excepted, is always short in aU poets; so II. 12. 455. S«XfSae(t), Od. 17. 268. ducking (^). 3. The pronouns rig(T) and t\q(X) are short ; comp. Drac. 88. 10. 103. 10. Reg. Pr. 57, in which passage irag is to be corrected into rig. Arcad, de ace. 193. 3. Measure of the final Syllable ig in Adverbs. §• 37. Adverbs in ig are short in the termination, as aXig, afjiv&g, XiKpi(f>ig(T), fJ-EXpig ; so the numeral adverbs, e. g. $(g(T), rpig(T) y TST 9 aK'ig(?), &c. ; Apollon. de adverb. 557. 3. Et. M. 405. 30. Venet. Schol. II. 16. 324. Note. — Grammarians, as Const. Lascar. 253. 21. partly ex- cept Tpig and Sig, as formed by syncope from rpiaicig and Svaicig ; yet this is contradicted by the usage of the poets, which shortens them, as Si'cOO ; Eurip. Suppl. 1085. Tpig(T) ; Theocr. Id. II. 43. VI. 39. XVII. 72. Asclepiad. Epigr. 25. 1. (A. P. V. 7). 56 GREEK PROSODY. Measure of v in the termination of words.— Measure m declension, §.38. 1. Names of letters ending in v are long, as /xv, vv, v \pi\6v ; comp. Const. Lasc. 233. 12 ; so the grammarian Stephanus uses them in the metrical index of the several books of the Ilias An- thol. Palat. IX. 385. 12. 13. 20. 2. Neuters of the third declension have the final syllable short, as aaru, yovv, vairij, 7rwu(u) ; comp. Drac. 34. 9. 68. 8. Reg. Pr. 40. The same holds of the neuters of adjectives in vg, act, v ; e. g. r\fXiav, %r\\v, l%v(v), ra;Y_v(u), wkv(u), &C. Note. — The undeclined ypv is long, and so Constant. Lasc. 254. gives it, but as an adverb, although it is more properly a substantive, as in Aristoph. Plut. 17; compare the Scholia and Hemsterhuis in the passage. 3. When the nominative is long, it appears natural that the v of the vocative should also be lengthened ; nevertheless the short quantity would also have much analogy in its favour. Buttmann, Gr. Gr. §. 42, note, defends the first, and adduces l-)ftv{v) with a long termination : shortened forms, however, of those that have a short nominative, are not infrequent with the poets, as Theocr. Id. X. 42. iroXvaraxv, Eurip. Here. Fur. 1137. wpivfiv. Myro Byzant. 1. 2. j3orpv Aiwvxxrov, but also Theocr. Id. XVII. 53. Kvavofypv. 4. The pronoun of the second person av is short; comp. Apollon. de pronomin. 327. f. Drac. 106. 15. Const. Lasc. 252. 26. In like manner the Doric tv, which, put as an enclitic, represents the accusative ; e. g. Theocr. Id. VIII. 7. X. 15. Measure of Adverbs and other terminations in v. §.39. 1. According to the testimony of the ancients adverbs in v are short; see Drac. 25. 1. Apollon. de adv. 614. 8. Et. M. 114. 33 ; e. g. £vSv(v), iii£Tat > v{v), irayyy, iravv, ttq6\vv. Note. — On the single avriicpv or avriKpvg the opinions of the ancients are divided ; Drac, as above, affirms that avriKpvg is by nature long ; the same rule is given more complete in GEEEK PROSODY. 57 Et. M. 114. 29. where the signification and quantity of clvtlkqvq and avriKpv are distinguished. Apollon. de adverb. 614. 7. considers the accentuation of avrtKpvg as irregular. Yet the Venet. Schol. on II. 5. 100. assumes the like differ- ence ; comp. also Bekk. Anecd. Gr. 1328. On the contrary, Eustath., as above, 527. 12. lays down avracpv to be both long and short, which, as he himself attempts to prove in some passages, is at least supported by Epic examples ; see Herm. Orph. 706. Besides, it must not be overlooked that avrucpvg never occurs in Homer ; in Apollonius it has sometimes been introduced by Brunck; see III. 493. In Quintus Sm. 4. 376. 8. 323. 13. 91. it stands as a dactyl. 2. Verbs in vjull lengthen the third person of the imperfect and also of the second aorist, where this occurs, as from v ; see Drac. 37. 13. Et. M. 289. 50. but also e8u, II. 11. 63. The same holds also in the tragedians, as is evident from the frequent ityv ; e. g. Soph. Electr. 1010. Eurip. Bacch. 733. Mel. Epigr. 95. 3; see Buttm. Gr. Gr. §. 107. note 16. Measure of the final Syllables vv and vg. — Measure in Declension. §.40. 1. We connect the final syllables vv and vg together in the discussion, because words which terminate with vv in the accu- sative, have vg in the nominative, and therefore these forms occur in the same examples. Now with respect first to words which tenninate in the nominative in vv, grammarians lay down that they lengthen the final syllable, e. g. Toprvv, fxocr- mentioned by Buttmann as short, is peculiar to Pindar. Nevertheless K\iTvg(v), vridvg{v), and some others, occur here and there with a short final syl- lable in the tragedians and later Epic authors. Hence one should hesitate in following Wernicke on Tryphiodor. 288. ff. however acute some of his remarks may be, when he rejects all examples of such shorts in the Alexandrine Epic poets. More probably this very circumstance occasioned the transi- tion to the short usage in the later Epic poets, who would rather borrow from other Epic writers than from tragedians. 1 GREEK PROSODY. 59 So, besides those mentioned by Wernicke, we have in Joannes Gazaeus, II. 11. vt}$vv(v) avevpvvovaa. 94. cf)(Xvv{v) airo- irrvovaa, Agath. Schol. 52. 4. (A. P. IX. 662.) vr]dvg{v) lire- ySoinrEi; see also on k\itvq(v), Monk on Eurip. Hippol. 227. Schaef. Mel. Cr. 73. Jacobs, A. P. 862. 692. Moreover it cannot be denied, that the accusative Ix^va, vr$va, and the like, occurs also in the later poets ; see Wernicke, as above. Jacobs, A. P. 502. c. Diminutives in vg are long, as Aiovvg, airfyvg, XapSvg, which grammarians circumflex; comp. Drac. 104.20. Et. M. 133. 53. Arcad. de ace. 92. 13. Note. — The words hitherto given, which have vv in the . accusative, naturally lengthen this case. d. According to the testimony of the ancients, the two end- ing in dog and Sog in the genit., $ayvg(v), vdog (doll), and Kwfjivg, vSog (bunch), are long; comp. Drac. 33. 22. 40. 11. 71. 12. Et. M. 532. 6. e. Participles of verbs in v/ull lengthen the syllable vg ; comp. Drac. 30. 1. Const. Lasc. 251. 12; this is the case both in the Epic poets and tragedians, as Horn. II. 10. 201. 6XXvg{v). Quint. Sm. I. 155. XIII. 24. dzncvvg{v). Theogn. 1035. Karadvg{v), &c. f. Lastly, the termination vg is long in plural forms contracted from veg and vag; as II. 16. 390. icXtTvg. Od. 11. 320. yivvg, and frequently; comp. Drac. 30. 18. 4. The termination vg in words of the third declension is short. a. In those in vg, which have vog in the genit. and are bary- tone, e. g. yivvg, true, TreXstcvg, vrayvg ; so also yripvg, irrj^vg ; see Drac. 30. 15. 33. 19. Arcad. de ace. 91. 9. 20. Note. — The words adduced have constantly the short quan- tity : therefore the reading received by Matthias, in Here. Fur. 5. is false, and must either be ^iraprtov aTa^yg j3Xa- ottjcev, according to Barnes, or, if with Elmsley, on Eurip. Bacch. 1133. we do not allow the omission of the augment: araxvg y £j3Xaor£v. For at least no one will here be dis- posed to defend the long quantity of this word ; comp. Theocr. Id. X. 47. Apollon. Arg. 1. 688. 3. 1389. 4. 989. Quint. Sm. 4. 425. 13. 242. although in tragedians it usually 60 GREEK PROSODY. stands at the end of a trimeter, as in Eurip. Cycl. 121. Bacch. 245. b. Those which have og impure in the genitive are short, whether they be oxytone or barytone, as 7n?Aa/xve(u), x^ a /^c(v), jiaprvg, Arcad. de ace. 91. 21. Note.— Arcad. de ace. 193. 6. indeed quotes the form jxaprvp with a long final syllable ; however, its use is proba- bly confined entirely to later writers, for elsewhere /maprvg always occurs, and that with a short final syllable; e. g. Theogn. 1226. Bion. Id. IV. 1. Manetho, Apotelesm. 5. 90. Nonn. Dionys. 3. 331. On the real exceptions Sayvg(v) and kwjuuc(v) we have spoken above under 3. d. On the contrary icopvg, vSog, vv, (helmet,) is always short ; see Drac. 34. 5. 58. 17. c. Also adjectives in vg, compounded from substantives in vg, shorten the termination, e. g. evaraxvg, TroXvSaicpvg, podoTrrixvg, Tpifipa'xvg, viripofypvg. The shortness even of those com- pounded from originally long forms, e. g. from lx%vg{v) and 6v(a), &c; comp., §. 20. Note. — To these add the heteroclite singular and plural forms, as Quint. Sm. 12. 109. dvtfpai, Soph. Electr. 460. oveipara. iEsch, Prom. 486. bvzipa.TU)v{a), the first exam- ple of which is in Horn. Od. 20. 87. also Apollon. Arg. 4. 172. irapuaaiv{a), if the reading be correct : II. 7. 212. 7rpo(Tu)Traaiv ; comp. Fisch. on Weller, II. 188. Buttm. Gr. Gr. §. 56. note 15. 3. The derivative cases of masculines in av, genit. avog, are long, as Ilav Havog, ' kviav ' ' kviavog. Soph. Electr. 714.; comp. Drac. 8. 13. Const. Lasc. 237. 22. and above, §. 23. 4. Note. — Here also the Ionians have, in most instances, 77, GREEK PROSODY. 63 as Tfrrjvec? H. 14. 279., but Ilav remains everywhere un- changed, as also in its derivatives. 4. Of forms in a£, genit. ayog, aKog, ayoe, there has yet been no opportunity of treating, as they are always long in the nomi- native, either by nature, as pa^(a), or at least by position. The ancients were not unanimous among themselves in determining the natural measure; see Drac. 18. 10. 47. 3. 51. 6. 76. 7. 80. 18. Reg. Pr. 6. 63. Et. M. 109. 45. 460. 55. Also Bast, on Greg. Corinth. 240. and Spohn, Commentat. de part. extr. Odyss. 120. ff. have made some observations in respect to diminutives in a£. In general the following appears to admit of being laid down agreeably to the definitions of the ancients and the usage of the poets. Derivative cases of words in a£ are long : a. In monosyllables of the masculine gender, as j3Aa£ (sim- pleton), 7TTa% (hare), 6pa£ (Thracian), genit. aKog, and pa%, payog (grape). Apollon. Ep. 5. 4. Diodor. Con. 3. 3. (A. P. VI. 22. 238.) ; see Drac. 19. 12. 80. 21. Reg. Pr. 60., in which passages, however, »cpa? is corruptly written for Qpa%. Of those quoted irraE, stands in ^Esch. Agam. 137. short, which is there defensible, as being of the feminine gender. b. Polysyllables, as 'EmdavpaZ, HpaE, (hawk), Aristoph. Av. 515. opOiaE, (part of a mast) ; comp. Drac. 19. 5. Reg. Pr. 63. c. The same measure is followed by dissyllabic radical forms of the masculine gender, which have the penultimate syllable long by nature, as 0wpa|, tpa?, Kvu§a% (pin), Orph. Pr. 2. 26., Aa/3pa£ (sea-wolf), Opp. Hal. 1. 112. otog (helm), Eurip. Hec. 1610. \va% (prattler), Nossus, Ep. 12. 3. (A. P. VII. 414.) crroaK (Stoic), viaZ, (young man), Callim. Fr. 78. pvaZ, (flood), besides those which have the penultimate long by nature, as j3wjua£ (parasite), irriXa^ (dirt), irXovrati (a rich noodle), Kpw/ia^ (heap of stones) ; lastly, some lengthened only by position, as iraaaaE, (nail), Aristoph. Acharn. 763. (rrojUKpaZ (boaster). Aristoph. Nub. 1370. (j)6praE, (carrier), with a short penultimate, 0cvaS aKOQ (deceiver). The reason of this lengthening lies in the long radical word 0£vafa£w. Others were used by the Comic poets rather as names of ridicule, and lengthened the final syllable on account of their contraction from other words, like the forms in ag and vg. For this reason one might be led to consider forms like voaaa% and vsoacraZ, j3a/3a£ from j3a/3aKrr]c in Lycophr. 472., genit. a/coe, as long. 5. On the contrary, words in a£ are short in the derivative cases. a. In monosyllables of the feminine gender, as SpaE, (handful), Batrachom. 240. kA«? (key), irXal (platter), Eurip. Hec. 8. owaE, (dog), in the genit. cucoc, so ora£ (obsol.) (drop), in the genit. ayoc, Apoll. Arg. 4. 626. b. Dissyllabic derivatives and diminutives of the feminine gender, which have the penultimate long by nature, are short, as av\a% (furrow), SpTdaZ, (lettuce), SpTva? (trident), kXT/xo? (ladder), iizipcfc (girl), irTSaZ, (fountain), GfiiXaZ, or [u\a% (yew tree), Eurip. Bacc. 659. Nonn. Dionys. 12. 86. Hereto the GREEK PROSODY. 65 ancients reckon also /3wXa£ (furrow), |3w/xa£ (little altar) as a distinction from the above 6 fiivfiaZ; see Drac. 18. 10. 47. 6. Lascar. 233. 15. Spohn, as above, 121. Note. — The assumption of the ancients, however, that these shortened words are only of the feminine gender, does not appear to be altogether well founded, as 6 Xa'/xa£ clkoq also, which is quoted only as masculine, occurs short ; see Eurip. Iph. in Aul. 1520. Epigr. Adesp 428. 10. (A. P. IX. 788) ; and hence it would be necessary in the two passages to take the form for a feminine, which does not agree well with the context. In like manner KpufiaZ,, given as long, is short in Lycophr. 653. where, however, icXwfxaKag stands according to another reading. c. Lastly, dissyllabic radical or diminutive words, which shorten the first syllable, are mostly short, e. g. a/3a£ (calcula- tion-table), S6va% (reed), Kafxa^(a) (pale), /coXa| (flatterer), icopati (crow), \i%a% (stone), /uvXaZ, (millstone), Trivcfc (tablet), okvXciE, (puppy), x<*P a % (palisade), aairaXa^ lengthened from cnraXaC, (mole) ; see Drac. 53, 17; so the most part of those lengthened only by position, namely, all wherein this is formed by two mute letters, as avSpa% (ashes), /uLaaTaE, and fxvara^ (mouth, morsel), irvvSaE, (bottom of a vessel), vcrcraZ, Aristoph. Lysist. 1011, but also many others containing a liquid letter, e. g. StypaZ, (chair), o/u^aE, (unripe grape), \apva% (chest), all in the genit. aKog. Lastly, those which take y or \ in the genit. have mostly the short vowel, as apiraE,, diaacpati, \a\a%, XaTati, in the genit. ayog, and rirpa%, in the genit. rirpaxog and rirpaKoq, for which in Drac. 51. 12. KtKpaZ, is falsely written. Note 1. — According to this rule , as Homer, Od. 10. 158. vipiKtpwv tXafov. Horn. Hymn. 18. 2. 37. Sucipwra, Eurip. Helen. 382. XpvaoKipwT tXafyov ; here, however, some MSS. have a. Hence may be explained the lengthened form Kspaara(aa) in Arat. Ph. 174. Quint. Sm. 6. 125. 238. Nonn. Dion. 10. 360. 12. 80. On the contrary, in Quint. Sm. 14. 595. icepawv should evidently be written for KEparuv ; comp. Buttm. Gr. Gr. §. 54. note 3. Tepaara{aa) in Quint. Sm. 5. 43. 12. 522. is of similar formation. 8. The following have always long a in the derivative cases : a. Kpag KpctTog (head), and Xag contr. from Xaag (stone), the latter in the full as well as the contracted forms, genit. Xaog and Xaog, accus. Xaav and Xaa in Quint. Sm. 13. 156. The former is often lengthened into aa in the oblique cases, Kpaarog, Kpdan, Opa), &c. ; as in Horn. II. 14. 177. 19. 93. Od. 22. 218. Apollon. Rh. 1. 222. 1010. 2. 1014. and often in later authors; on the other, see Et. M. 553. 1. b. Adjectives derived from Kepawvpi are long, as fieXiKpag arog, yet they have frequently rj ; comp. §. 28. 1. f. c. Of participles in ag, aaa, av, the feminine form is naturally long, as II. 20. 12. (povriaaaa, &c. and so every where. d. In these forms, and in masculines in ag, avrog, the dative plural in aari is always long, e. g. Fiyamv, ijucktiv, &c. ; see Drac. 113. 12. Const. Lasc. 236. 16. Note. — The same termination in words in rip, which suffer 1 GREEK PROSODY. 67 syncope in the genitive, is short, as avr\p, $uyarrjp, avBpaai(a) y Svyarp aai(a) 9 &C. 9. Words in wp mostly shorten the termination in the deri- vative cases, as "Apa\p afiog, &lpcn//, \al\axp, airog. Reg. Pr. 67. Generally (}>aip 0aj3oe (a species of dove) is given as long, but it is short, e. g. Lycophr. 580 ; so also irXivSofiaip and similar compounds take the short quantity ; comp. Arcad. de ace. 94. 12. Only Spaip, probably for Spcnrirrig (fugitive), and \a\p, a Tarentine word, are named as long. §.44. 1. With respect to the inflection of adjectives, it yet remains to be mentioned, in addition to the above, that forms of the superlative in rarog always shorten the doubtful vowel, as co^w- rarog, XaXiararog, &c. ; see Lasc. 242. 25. 2. Of numerals it is to be observed, that Siaicoo-ioi, together with rpiaKOvra{a), Tpicucocrioi, and the compounds, as Theocr. Id. XIII. 74. rpLCLKovraZvyov "Apycj, are invariably long, on which account the Ionians write TpirjKOvra, &c. Et. M. 290. 50. Buttm. Gr. Gr. §. 70. note 12. In the other hundreds, as TsaaapaKOGioi, irsvraKomoi, &c. the syllable is short, so also TE(T(T£paicovTa(a), Horn. II. 2. 524. 534. The remaining tens have r/, as TrsvTrjKovTa, k^KovTa ; for 6y§or}KOVTa Homer has oySw- Kovra, II. 2. 568. Note. — Later authors, however, said also rptaKOvra(a), ac- cording to the analogy of the other numerals ; comp. Jacobs, A. P. 617. 705. 806. Measure of i in the penultimate and antepenultimate Syllables of Declension. §.45. To be able to determine the measure of i in the penultimate syllable, it is only necessary to speak of the terminations i%, ig, and i\p 9 besides the invariably short neuters, as /aiXt Xrog ; for originally iv, as has already been mentioned, existed usually in ig. In the genit. of words in i%, tyog, iicog, t\og, the measure is variable. 1. The i is long : f2 68 GREEK PROSODY. a. In monosyllables, which do not begin with two consonants, e. g. t£ (worm), §{% (sphinx) in the genit. 7/coe, to these add <£pi£ (shuddering). II. 23. 692. (f>plic6g, and ^i£ 7x»e (crumb), whence ¥7xap7ra£ Batrachom. 24. 27 ; comp. Drac. 27. 4. 93. 5. Reg. Pr. 64. Buttm. Gr. Gr. §. 41. note 11. b. Dissyllables, which lengthen the penultimate syllable either by nature or position, are generally long, as cu£ (storm) Apol- lon. Rh. 4. 820. together with its compounds, j3£/ij3t£ 7koc (top) Callim. Ep. 1. 9. \iavTi% lyog (whip), opviZ, lx<>g (bird) Theocr. Id. VII. 47. rripSiZ, 7»coe (partridge) Opp. Cyn. 2. 317. ttcju^ lyog (breeze), cncavSiZ licog (chervil) Aristoph. Ach. 477. Tip/mi^ licog (a proper name) Nonn. Dionys. 4. 99. tzttiE, lyog (grass- hopper), (poiviZ, Itcog (purple, and also. as a proper name) ; comp. Drac. 93. 8. Note 1. — The word Oprj'i^ iicog is arbitrary, in Homer short as a resolved form, e. g. II. 2. 844. OpijiKagtf), in later authors of fluctuating measure, e. g. Apollon. Arg. I. 637. Opr)'iicag(T), but I. 24. 6pwici{7), 632. 6pr)licag{l), &c. ; see Drac. 27. 18. Dorvill. Van. Crit. p. 386. Jacobs, A. P. 585. Note 2. — The word yolvi% ucoe makes an exception to the above rule, and always shortens the penultimate, as has already been remarked by Drac. 27. 16. Reg. Pr. 64. Thus Od. 19. 28. yoiVLKOg airrrirat. Note 3. — The length of i naturally remains when the letter comes to stand in the antepultimate syllable, as in the poetic datives, e. g. II. 2. 744. Ai£fe£e, &c. 3. In like manner in the termination ig derivative forms mostly conform to the radical word. Therefore, a. those adduced §. 36. 1. a. b. in ~ig ~ivog, and 7c ISog, are long in the derivatives. This is naturally the case also when they stand in the ante- penultimate syllable, as Horn. II. 17. 757. 6pvt$£<7(Hv(7). 10. 547. aKTiva- vigtf), K£pictc(i)j genit. iSoc(i) dat. £&(i). 2Vbfe. — Also independent adjectives of the kind are invaria- bly short, as 'ISptg, tog, vq'ig, i§og(X) ; the compounds and de- rivatives follow the radical forms, thus Eurip. Here. 1026. wapOevov IlaAXi]viSoe(i). II. 21. 355. woXyfiriTiog. Likewise dual pronominal adjectives are always short, as vwir£poe(t), &c. Horn. II. 15. 39. 5. Of words in op, Drac. 53. 16. says, that they lengthen the final syllable, and as an example quotes the Homeric tctpa tirsg 'iSoiev, Od. 21. 395. The same holds of the monosyllables Kvbp and Op'op, see on the signification Et. M. 481. 3.; and lastly pop, pLirog (rush) Od. 5. 256. is long ; comp. Eustath. 1533. 48. ff. Buttm. Gr. Gr. §. 111., note 11. 6. On the contrary, the monosyllables vlip, vttyog (snow) He- siod. Op. 535., although the nominative of this is not in use, and \ip, 6 (south-wind), as also \ip, 17 (drop), are short ; comp. Dionys. Perieg. 231. 634. Nonn. Dion. 1. 228. Apollon. Rh. 4. 1434., the last is mentioned also by Draco ; in like manner poly- syllables, as yipvop, evrpi-p, oiKOTptip, TraiSoTptip, in the genit. t/3oc. Hence probably it is more correct to read Karrj\i\p tyog (upper story) in Aristoph. Ran. 566., which is supported by the analogy of r\\o%, b^.ri\o%. §. 46. Derivative and compound adjectives have been treated of; hence the comparative form in iojv alone remains to be consi- dered. In this the ancients suppose the 1 to be long by nature ; see Drac. 20. 25. 56. 20. Reg. Pr. 87., but observe that it is sometimes shortened; comp. Drac. 85. 24. Et. M. 753. 27. This always holds for Homer and the Epic poets, although the former usually employs only neuters in iov, as dia^lov, aXyXov, koXXlov, KtpSiov, piytov ; of the other genders he has only jXvklwv(T) II. 1. 249. 2. 453. icaictwvft) Od. 14. 56. and fcaX- Atoi/£c(t), Od. 10. 396. Later Epic writers and Epigramma- tists use these forms with a variable measure, so Nonn. Dion. 10. 418. Ta X (ova{~i); see Schaefer Melet. Cr. 101. f. With the GREEK PROSODY. 71 Attics, on the contrary, i is generally long, Porson, Eurip. Orest. 499., and only rarely shortened, as Eurip. Supp. 1105. ovEev rj&ov. Meinecke, Cur. Critic. 36. ff. Note. — Comparatives of adjectives in vg, with a double , w, v%, up, vg, and v\p in their derivative forms. 1. Neuters in v generally change the vowel in the genitive, but in those instances where it remains are short, as vdirv, vd- nvog ; see §. 38. 2. 2. Those ending in vv or vg are long, as ixoaavvog, op/cu- vog ; see §. 40. Of words in v% 9 genit. vyog, v%og, an( ^ vk °Qj the measure is variable, yet they are mostly short. 3. Only dissyllables in v%, vicog, which have the penultimate long by nature, are long, as SoiSvl;, incog (pestle), KrjpvZ (herald), icTjiif; (king-fisher), gen. 'incog, to which add j3o/x/3u£, vKog (silk worm) ; see Drac. 28. 6. 56. 1. Reg. Pr. 65. Note 1.— The quantity of fiifipvK, VKog (the name of a na- tion) fluctuates. In Apollon. Rh. it is mostly long, as 2. 2. 70. 129. 768. 791., in 2. 98. short, and so always in Theocr. Id. XXII. 29. 77. 91. 100. Lycophr. 516. Note 2. — Of words in v%, vyog, KokkuS, vyog (cuckoo) is alone long, e. g. Nicand. Ther. 854. Lycophr. 395. The ancients, however, except this as arbitrary ; see Drac. 28. 2. 93. 19. Reg.Pr. 65. 4. On the contrary, the following in v% are long in the deri- vative cases : a. Forms in VKog, which have the penultimate in the nomi- 72 GREEK PROSODY. native either short or lengthened only by position, as ajwrrvZ (frontlet) II. 22. 469. KaAu£ (cup of a flower) II. 18. 401. "Epv? (a mountain in Sicily) Apollon. Rh. 4. 917. pu£ (Phrygian), in the genit. vyog, tttvE,, vy/c (f°ld), t™!;, vicog (an open space in Athens), although the regular genitive of this was -rrvKvog ; comp. Drac. 27. 3. Reg. Pr. 65. Note 1. — Some of the second class, however, become long by position, as (papvyZ,, vyyog (throat), where the palatic letter sometimes enters ; see Lobeck on Phryn. 72. Note 2. — The derivatives and compounds naturally follow the radical forms, as Theocr. Id. X. 16. 36. BojufivKa(v) yaphaaa. Aristoph. Av. 815. 820. NrfeXoKOicKvyia (cloud- cuckoo -town), and so also the exclamation kokkv(v) (cuckoo.) Ibid. 104, but from short roots, II. 5. 358. ypvadfurvKEg. Paul. Silent. Amb. 169. 7ro\vdvrvyi kwvw, &c. §. 42. 1. 5. Words in vp are to be assumed as always short, except perhaps only KspKvpeg, on account of KipKvpa(v), if it should any where occur. 6. Of forms in vg, genit. vdog or vog (see §. 40. 3. 4.) the de- rivative cases are short; thus, l%vg vog{v), yX -! 1 ^ ^) > unless they happen to be made long by contraction, as Od. 16. 105. 7rA?7S-u7, as dative sing., or by position, as Od. 11. 569. 23. 45. veicvacri. The passages formerly quoted from Batrachom. 98. 144. for the lengthening of fivog, have been corrected in later editions. Consequently, besides Hesiod, Op. 436. Spvbg eXy/ua, where the arsis defends it, probably Horn. II. 21. 318. l\vog(v) remains the only example of an old Epic lengthening of the quantity in the middle of the word. GREEK PROSODY. 73 d. Aajvg v<$og and K(Lfjtvg vSog, Theocr. II. 110. IV. 18. are long; comp. §. 40. 3. d. 7. Of words in vip the monosyllables yvxp (vulture), and ypvxp (griffin), genit. vnog, are long. The former is shewn in Ho- mer, e. g. II. 4. 237. 11. 162 ; also for the latter more decisive passages than JEschyl. Prom. 317. 803. occur, only at the mo- ment I am unable to find them again ; therefore, in the mean- while, Virg. Eel. VIII. 27. Jungentur jam gryphes equis, which Passow also quotes, may serve as authority. §.48. Adjectives which from vg, eta, v, form the comparative and superlative in vrepog, vrarog, have v always short in these termi- nations, as j3paYjjTspoc(v), fipa)(vTaTog(v), only in Homer tSvvrara from ISvg stands once, II. 18. 508. lengthened by position. Measure of the doubtful Vowels, a, t, v, in conjugation. §. 49. On the measure of a, t, v, when they stand either alone or in combination with others in the end of conjugation, we have spoken above. In the further prosecution of the inquiry it will be convenient to distinguish certain classes of verbs, which follow one common analogy, and to treat them in common. Such are verbs in a£w, tZ,w, vZto, avw, tvto, vvw, vpw, aw, tw, and vu), and lastly forms in fit, which observe like laws in the doubtful vowel. But before entering upon the consideration of the individual classes, we shall premise some general observa- tions applicable to several kinds of verbs. General observations on the measure of the arbitrary Vowels in conjugation, % 50. 1. The final syllable a, the shortness of which in the histo- rical tenses has been stated §. 22. 1., retains its measure in forms where it enters the penultimate syllable ; e. g. e(3\a\pa, efiXaipa/uev, reOvKa, reOvKare, and so in the derivative forms, as II. 1. 512. ^aro, 454. tyao; see Theodor. Gaz. p. 77. Basil, edition. 74 GREEK PROSODY. a. Except from these only the third person plural of the per- fect in aaiy as Keicpvacri(a), TrzfypiKaai, XiXoiircKTi, which has always long a ; comp. Drac. 33. 1. Reg. Pr. 106. Buttm. Gr. Gr. 87. 8. note 4. under the text. Note. — Nevertheless the same grammarians, as Draco 88. 5. 108. 21., comp. Bast, to Greg. Cor. 166. inform us, that poetic licence sometimes shortened these syllables. The examples, indeed, quoted in confirmation from Horn. Od. 7. 114. 11. 304., which the old various readings formerly fur- nished, are now altered, but this is more difficult in the verse there quoted of Xenophanes, and in Nicand. Ther. 789. £(nc\rjica, aivw, (j>avw ; this holds also of the second aorist and second future in the passive, where these forms are extant, e. g. l$avr\v{a), av//ao- 76 GREEK PROSODY. fiai. The first aorist active, on the contrary, always takes either a long vowel or diphthong, as reXXw, tTEiXa, (paivto, zcpriva, tte- patvio, liripava, jutoruXXcu, IfiicrrvXa, e. g. Soph. Trach. 191. ictp- Edvaijui(a), Eurip. Cycl. 401. e^ippdve ; see Lascar. 249. 1. Theod. Gaza. 76. 71. Buttm. Gr. Gr. §. 101. 3. 4. Note. — When the future 'apw sometimes occurs in the tra- gedians with a lengthened penultimate, it is contracted from aepuj, thus ae'ipix), fut. 'aepw, 'apw ; comp. Porson, Eurip. Med. 848. Elmsley, Med. 825. and particularly Here. 233. 5. In the middle syllable of verbs barytone, it appears that the arbitrary vowel in the first j)erfect strictly follows the mea- sure of the root in the present; hence the middle syllable is short in most forms which have a in the present, as ypacpcj yiypa^a, but fluctuates in those with t and v ; e. g. rptj3o>(7), rlrp7<^a, but p'nrrw Ippifya, comp. Opp. Cyneg. 4. 350., although Drac. 52. 17. 73. 20. 79. 21. considers this word naturally long in the present. The same fluctuation takes place in v, as kvtttlo KtKvcpa (invariably long) ; see Eurip. Cycl. 212. Anthol. Pa]. VI. 37. 1. ftou X w fiifipvxa, Horn. II. 17. 264. and so always in Homer and the later authors, as Apollon. Rh. 2. 831. 4. 629., wherefore the reading of Zenodotus dvafiifipoxtv, instead of avapti^pv^jEv, in II. 17. 54., which agrees better even with the context, has probably been disdained solely on account of its author. On the contrary, Kpv-rrTw, KtKpv^a, Hesiod. Op. 386. Theogn. 730., whence the substantive KBKpv(paXog{v) ; comp. Lascar. 249. 14. Theod. Gaz. 78. 26. Drac. 87. 24. 6. The second perfect, with the exception of those which have a in the root, and change it into o, as rptyu), rlrpo^a, has usually a long vowel; so XiXrjKag, Hesiod, Op. 207. is to be read. Hence the doubtful vowel is also regularly long, as ayw (I break), eaya, av^avw eaba, Kpd^io Kzicpaya, piyiw eppiya, rplZu) rirplya, (f>pi(jvacFiv(v), SO participles, as tKytyavla, kjunre^vvTa ; comp. II. 2, 134. 4,41. 10,93. 11,40. GREEK FROSODY. 77 Lascar. 249. 8. Buttm. Gr. Gr. §. 97. note 10. Thiersch as above, 24. Only the participle of the form jmi/naa occurs with a vari- able measure fie/naoreg and jnefxaioTeg ; the former, however, is the more rare, and consequently the exception, in Homer only in II. 2. 818., but much more frequent in later authors ; e. g. Quint. Sm. 2, 518. 3, 13. 5,334. 6, 278. 7, 5. 8, 185. 11, 244. yet with- out excluding the other. The shortness of a is shewn in other forms, as 11. 8. 413. jiiixarov, 9. 646. fnifxa/uLev, 7. 3. 12. 405. fiEfiaaav. Theocr. Id. XXV. 64. /me/maw, so also in other pluper- fects, as II. 2. 720. Ififiifiacrav. But the poets use the last syl- lable of the participle perfect according to the exigency of the verse in other words also ; so rerplyorEg, besides TErplytJTs g and the like. The Epic infinitive usually ends in this case in afizv, as Horn. II. 5. 248. 20. 106. 209. kycyajusi^a), so also Hymn. Horn. 49. 1. EfcyEyacire. b. In feminine participles Epic writers assume the licence of shortening the vowel in this originally long form, as II. 3. 331. eiTKT^vpioig apapviag, Od. 12. 85. XeXa/cma, see Thiersch, Gr. Gr. as above, 30. The tragedians have of the above-mentioned forms at least the infinitive and participle, as Eurip. Heracl. 609. /3£j3aveu(a) and yzyawg ysywg. Eurip. Here. Fur. 1147. Heracl. 326. c. In the epigram of Rufinus XX. 2. the reading /ct/cpayev iog, with a shortened a, is corrupt, and has already been corrected by Hermann, Orph. 805. by the omission of ug. To any one who with Jacobs, Anthol. Pal. 804. may consider this too harsh, we propose the reading Kticpay wg; at all events Epigr. Cyci- zen, No. 5. 2. juidvai(a), and other examples from Christian poets, quoted by Jacobs, do not justify the short measure in Rufinus. 7. Perfect forms with what is called the Attic reduplication have usually in polysyllabic verbs a short vowel in the penulti- mate, uXd(j)U) a\r]Xia, opvaato opwpvya, Buttm. Gr. Gr. §. 85. 2. Lobeck, Phryn. 31. ff. Nevertheless, in Ionic poets forms of this kind are occasion- ally lengthened, as the well-known ukrfXovSa, vTrzuvhfxvK*, II. 22. 491. 8. When a is inserted in the third person plural of the per- 78 GREEK PROSODY. feet or pluperfect passive, or of the optative, it is always short, as II. 11.26. opwpixaro. 16.68. KeKXiarai. 12.229. TraSomro, the last of which forms remained usually with the tragedians also, asEurip. Iph. in Taur. 316. oxraiaTo, 1306. 6\oiaro, and elsewhere; comp. Const. Lascar. 246. 19. Theodor. Gaz. 8. 9. Also the reduplication before the root of verbs in /ull by the addition of i is short, as TiSrifiitf), 8iSwjut(t) ; comp. Lascar. 248. 13. This rule may be extended to forms having a similar short prefix, as cUtSaaicu), Ttraivto, TiTvaKOfiai, iriQavarich), and others, which are only lengthened sometimes by position, as TmrpaaKii), TiTpdxjKb), but have the vowel in itself short. Note. — In Homer, however, the active TrifyavaKtx) is of com- mon measure, and occurs four times in the second and third foot long, II. 10, 478. 502. 18, 500. Hymn, to Henn. 540. but elsewhere short, II. 10, 202. Od. 11, 442. 12, 165. 22, 131. 247. The middle is always short, II. 12, 280. 15, 97. 16, 12. 21, 99. and so also five times in the Odys. Later writers generally use both forms short; e.g. Apollon. Arg. 2, 685. 3,606.1065. Nicand.Ther. 411. 637. Arat. Th. 411. Dion. Perieg. 173. Quint. Sm. 9, 226. 12, 39. 10. Also verbs in a$w and v%w are often derived from shorter forms, in which case the doubtful vowel is always short, as afxvvu) a/bivva&io, sikio eiKa&io, Apollon. Rh. 1. 505. 2. 790. zlpyaSw epyaSev, II. 11, 437. Stw/ca^w, so at least the ancients state of these forms, together with those in tS"w, as vefxe^io ; comp. Drac. 19. 17. Et. M. 8. 18. On the contrary, Elmsley, Eurip. Med. 186. is disposed to consider them as second aorist, and to write afiwa&eiv, &c. This opinion, however, is contra- dicted by real present forms, as II. 6. 327. Od. 8. 530. $%ivv- Zovm{v), II. 15, 493. 16, 392. pnrfdii(v). Particular rules on the measure of the vowels a, i, v, in the individual classes of verbs. §. 51. On verbs in a?w, iZto, u£a>, avw, ivio, vvio, and vpu). Verbs which have the double consonant Z before their final vowel are always short in the derivative tenses, the present being long only by position, as arifiaZto a(a), koSIZm GREEK PROSODY. 79 i(to)(Y), t/caSio-a, kXvZo) vawiy), eic\v(ra, &c. ; comp. Drac. 21. 17. 26. 20. 58. 12. Reg. Pr. 50. 125. Et. M. 535. 43. 737. 20. Clarke, II. 1. 140. Hereto add those which have aa in the pre- sent, and a simple consonant in the future, as Ifxaaow, ir\apa, with its compounds, e. g. II. 2, 282. 9, 426. 13, 141., and often in the Odyssey. The same takes place in those in iZio, as II. 7. 449. heixiGaavro, 22. 489. airovpiaaovGiv, Od. 2. 298. £(j)OTr\i(Tvyydv(x)(d), X av ~ ddvw{d) ; comp. Drac. 107. 24. Peg. Pr. 44. 68. So most of them occur in the tragedians and Epic poets, as II. 1. 378. rjvSave, 11. 74. 7rapSTvy)(ave, Theocr. Id. XIII. 57. lyav§avz y Soph. Electr. 592. Xa^j3av£tc(a). Eurip. Bacch. 1271. Oiyya- v(x)v(a). Note 1. — 'I/cavwfa), which passed from the Epic dialect to the tragedians, is invariably long ; see II. 1, 610. 4, 321. 8, 147. Soph. El. 8. CEd. Col. 576. On the contrary, Kixdvio occurs long in Homer and the Epic poets, II. 2, 18. 5, 334. 10, 150. Quint. Sm. 1. 487; but in the tragedians, long in the first syllable, and short in the second, according to the analogy of Tvyxdv(x)(d) ; see Eurip. Hipp. 1434. Alcest. 495. Helen. 597. The same is the case with ^a'vw, which Homer, II. 9, 506. 21, 262. uses long, and the tragedians short, as Eurip. Med. 1159. Here. Fur. 976 ; so in the Epigrammatic poets, as Apollonid. 28. 3. (A. P. VII. 378.) fyZavev 'HXioStopog ; see Jacobs, A. P. 884. GREEK PROSODY. 81 Note 2. — Epic poets not infrequently shorten verbs in aivw into avu), as Horn. II. 7. 64. iue\dvu(a), 9. 554. oiSavet(a), 14. 73. /ci)Sava(a), Nonn. Dion. 2. 40. oXtVSavov. 3. The determination of verbs in ivto and vvto is connected with somewhat more difficulty. The ancients, in several pas- sages, lay them down to be long in the present and aorist, and so with slight exception they always appear, as jcXiVw(7), eicXlva, 6pivd)(~t), wplva, j3padvv(i)(v), Si)Sruvcti(v), fir}K.vvii)(v), , Kpiva), ir\vvw, that, with the exception of the first aorist, they shorten the derivative tenses by rejecting v, might be extended to other words also of the same kind, although examples of the individual tenses are rare, especially of the per- fect and pluperfect active ; see Lobeck Phryn. 34. ff. The shortness of these forms is clear also from the first aorist pas- G 82 GREEK PROSODY. sive, in which the poets regularly insert v to produce the long quantity, as II. 5. 29. opivSri, 3. 360. ticXivSr), 13. 129. koivZIv- rsg, Dion. Perieg. 177. d^vv^elaa, Soph. Aj. 651. l%r\\vv%r\v, Nonn. 8. 56. 12. 213. l§i\\vv%r\, JEsch. Prom. 865. airafifiXw- Sfoerai, Paul. Silent. Epigr. 51. 6. (A. P. VI. 65.) apfiXvvSeig, which examples show at the same time that this is done uni- formly in poets of all periods ; but this intension would not hare been necessary if the syllable had been in itself long. The ana- logy of these verbs is followed by ktzivg) and rdvu), which like- wise shorten the derivative tenses ; see Buttm. Gr. Gr. as above. Fischer on Weller, II. 367. a. The Epic poets often insert £ before the final vowel in these verbs, thereby giving the forms the signification of the future, and shortening the doubtful vowel, e. g. II. 2. 387. Siaicpiv&i, 13. 209. 6rpvviu)v, 18. 411. 7ropGvvEovara, Od. 7. 31. irkvviovGa, and the like in other Epic poets. The same is the case in verbs in cuvw, as II. 5. 688. evcppavieiv. b. Forms derived from the short tenses of the above-men- tioned verbs have likewise a short vowel, as aicptrog, tKKpXrog, ILvicpiTOQ (a proper name), in Theocr. Id. VII. 131. Kptrrjg, and adverbs, as Sta/cpTSov, lyKXtSov, so aKXivfig, cucXiviwg. Anthol. Palat. V. 55. 4. irXvvog, Od. 6. 40. 16. 173. tij'n-Xvvig, Dioscor. Ep. 30. 3. (A. P. VII. 708.) TraXifnrXvrov. Here, however, length by position is also met with, particularly in the deriva- tives of kXlvco and ttXvvw, as kXlvt{]p (chair), 7rXvvrrip TrXvvrpia (washer) ; see also Clarke, II. 1. 314. 338. c. The dissyllabic forms tlvm and $ivovTog{?), (FA. Col. 610. Eurip. Alcest. 55. 203 ; see Clarke, Horn. II. 2. 43. Wiistemann, Eurip. Alcest. 638. On the contrary, ttlvoj is always long, and Paul. Silent. 74. 117. J>c /U17 TriveaSai ZuoTg, is probably to be read iriiaSaL In Quint. Sm. 1. 492. for kukXIto iroXvg arparog, which would GREEK PROSODY. 83 offend against the established rule, Struve has proposed kskv- \ktto ; in the same poet, 8. 275. al^jicu we can speak of the measure of the present in Epic poets only, as, on account of contraction, it never appears in the Attic usage. The older writers on prosody lay down the rule, that a is long when preceded by a long syl- lable, and short when preceded by a short one, e. g. $i\pa%d(JLo(d); as Theoc. Id. II. 114. fySdaag. Tryphiodor. 156. Nonn. 9. 140. £^a<7£v, Quint. Sm. 13. 62. $%ddog(d), (jxiivb), ddv(t), (j>d£Lvog(d), ^irjg(J) ; on the contrary, 11. 18. 446. £0£i£v. The future 0St<o 9 %ijuiEvog( u i), are invariably short, together with their derivatives, e. g. acpSXrog. When any apparent lengthening appears, the mode is the optative, and the long quantity is produced by the union of the modal vowel, as Od. 10. 51. ci7ro^)S'£jur]v(7), 11. 329. irpiv yap kev kcu vv£, (j>S1t apfipo- rog. Clarke, II. 13. 339., although there a false derivation is given. But the Attic tragedians use the future ^$to-o>(i), which might also be referred to^&ivco, short, Soph. Trach. 711.AJ. 1027., whence such derivatives as (j>Si(jig$(j), &i£Tai(v), Apollon. Arg. 1. 581. $vzto(v), Jacobs, A. P. 354; on the other hand, II. 3. 114. e^vovro{v), 5. 140. &/er«u(v), H. to Aphr. &Su€, Quint. 8m. 8. 275. Suov(v), Arat. Ph. 184. SvriTai(v) and frequently, also v. 553 this is to be restored for the always long dvvrirai{v). Nevertheless the long quantity always stands in the arsis. — Svio (I sacrifice), Horn. Od. 15. 222. Su€, Sophocl. EL 631. Eurip. Here. Fur. 916. ti Svu){v), Nonn. 1 92 GREEK PROSODY. Dion. 12. 230. Od. 15. 260. Svovratf), Theocr. Id. IV. 21. S{,ovtl{v), Eurip. Cycl. 234. Svw(v), Electr. 1145.— Suw (I rage) always long, II. 11. 180. 21. 234. and even in the thesis, Hes. Op. 621. Dionys. Perieg. 677. — \vw in Homer usually short, as Od. 2. 69. 4. 35. 7. 6. Yet the long quantity also occurs, and that mostly in the arsis, II. 23. 513. e\mv, Od. 7. 74. \vei{v), 2. 105. 109. d\\va)(v), Apollon. Rh. 3. 808. dve\veTo{v), 822. \{,- £(tks{v) (even in the thesis), Opp. Cyn. 1. 13. Aua(v) ; but Quint. Sm. 2. 296. \vev{v), 7. 582. \vovro{v). On the contrary, with the Attics the long is the predominant and regular measure, as Soph. Trach. 21. CEd. to Col. 1616. Eurip. Med. 563. 1305. 1352. He- racl. 601.— vw with a long vowel, II. 12. 25. Theocr. Id. IV. 43. Theogn. 26. Asclepiad, Ep. 23. 3. (A. P. 1. 189.) v6^vog(v). Nevertheless the arbitrariness of the vowel, although it cannot be found short in this form, is clear from the nearest derivative vsrog, which is long in Horn. II. 12. 133. Quint. Sm. 1. 68. short in Arat. Ph. 804. Quint. Sm. 14. 6. — (pvio always short in Homer, as Od. 7. 119. 9. 109. &c. ; so Theocr. Id. IV. 15. vovTi{v) ; but Dionys. Perieg. 528. tyvz.Tm(v), 734. 1031. vov- \vovra{v), 1238. Imj5\va{v), TTTuw (I spit), II. 4. 426. clttotttv^v), Apoll. Rh. 2. 510. 4. 925. dntTTTvtv. Nonn. Dion. 10. 171. 11. 496. airrvE. Quint. Sm. 1. 599. 10. 66. afiirvdev, 9. 470. II. 22. 222. a/*7rvu£, a) (I sput- ter), II. 21. 361. fyXve, Apollon. Arg. 1. 481. ETri\v£iv(v). a. Eva (I polish) is always long, Od. 22. 456. Arat. Ph. 650. Dionys. Perieg. 61. 385. 1117: hence this measure does not merely belong to later writers, as Wernicke, Tryphiodor. 408, supposes. This holds also of rpviD, so Nicand. Alex. 83. vtto- TpvEi(rpv) ; comp. Blomfield, JEschyl. Prom. 27 ; so also the derivatives, as 'Arpwrwvr], cltqvtoq, Theocr. Id. XV. 7. b. On the contrary, fipvu) (I teem), and icXixt) (I hear), are always short in the tragedians and Epic poets ; see the former, Sophocl. El. 415. (Ed. Col. 16. Eurip. Bacch. 95. Paul. Silent. Ep. 74. 105.; the other is very frequent ; e. g. Soph. El. 520. Trach. 72. Eurip. Heracl. 536. 842. The long quantity is rare, GREEK PROSODY. 93 as in Gaisf. Hephaest. 756. and a late comic writer dvr'ip rig Ntvog ejeve& we tyw k\vw(v), although others transpose the first words ; see also Meinecke Cur. Cr. 52. c. The above-mentioned verbs, as has been observed, are usually long in the future and first aorist, as Suo-o^w) t$vjri(3v(Tag{v). d. On the contrary, 7rrvw, 7ttvv{v). Hedyl. Ep. 4. 1. (A. P. T. II. 765) KaTa/jLvoiuEv(v), in Opp. Cyn. 2. 190. 575. 4. 123. lirifivw stands, yet always with the variant reading lirrifxvtjj ; see Wernicke, Tryph. p. 57. The aorist E^xvaa is everywhere short, as Horn. II. 24. 637. Eurip. Med. 1173. fivvvTaXtri, Horn. II. 6. 195. Arat. 333. and elsewhere. The forms derived from the future are regularly long, as XvcriZwvog, Xvaiirovog, XvaifxeXi'ig, ^iaXvai(j)iXog ; here the examples of arbitrary short- GREEK PROSODY. 95 ening are very rare, and not sufficiently certain. In like manner fiovXvrog, with long v, and in Arat. 825. fiovXvaiogfi) wpi) ; so also XijTrjp, XvTrjpiog, mostly short, as Apoll. Rh. 4. 704. Xvrr'i- piov; comp. Sophocl. El. 450. 1491. although here the long quantity is not entirely unknown. 5. Polysyllabic words in uw, when the penultimate is length- ened by nature or position, likewise admit of arbitrary measure in the present, but are always long in the derivative tenses ; e. g. dvd), dirvd), ayAvw, yr^pvofiai, ^atcpva), kXivvu), lpr)Tvii) f rnuvui, l<$pvo), lb>(v) Od. 9. 493. 10. 442. Apoll. 1. 772. 4. 187. IpijriJwp) Od. 3. 155. II. 2. 75. 8. 345. Apollon. 1. 352. 3. 380. epnri- £i(v), Agath. Schol. 58. 7. (A. P. Th. 1. 79) Ppsv$vzTai{d), &c. a. Some exceptions occur only in very late epic poets, thus 'ISpvaa, which Homer and the tragedians always lengthen, is sometimes short with them; see Wernicke, Tryphiodor. p. 105. Jacobs, Anthol. Pal. III. 242. 633. 835., in like manner rinvaa ; comp. Jacobs as above. b. Some trisyllabic words, which have an e or short a before the v, and lengthen it only by position, are always short in the epic poets, as apTiHi), IvTvit), eXkvlo ; see the first, Horn. Od. 3. 152. 4. 771.5. 439. Apoll. 1. 392. Nonn. Dion. 1. 393., in the tragedians also long, as Eurip. Heracl. 419. iEsch. Pr. 907. E%aprvETai{v), and so also the derivative tenses, Soph. GEd. Col. 71. Karap- Tvcrwv(v). Lycophr. 163. — evtvw as a merely epic word is always short, Horn. II. 5. 720. 8. 374. 382. H. to Demet. 377. Quint. Sm. 4. 101. Theogn. 196. evtvel{v), also in Quint. Sm. 6. 116. £vtvvovto(v) is to be restored for evtvovto(v). — eXkvio, which is unknown to the older epic poets, the tragedians always shorten in the derivative tenses, as Eurip. Cycl. 416. Phoen. 987. in the later epic poets it is sometimes long, as Oph. Hal. 3. 332, unless here, as it often appears also short, the double consonant is to be preferred ; see Wernicke, Tryphiodor, 69. c. Agreeably to this analogy, Brunck in Apoll. Rhod. 2. 322. has taken offence at Kop%vETai(v), and without MSS. written H 98 GREEK PROSODY. ; Kop%vvETai(v), but the former is supported by $aKpvw(v) and the like as well as by the sense. Nicand. Ther. 426 has koo- $v£Tai(v), with the same quantity. 6. Those verbs in vw, which have a short vowel in the ante- penultimate, are short both in the present and the derivative tenses, as avvto(v), apvcoiv), d{^)), Tavv(v(v) ; comp. Horn. 4, 56. avvw(v), 24. 452. H. to Ap. 435. uvvaeie{v), Dion. Perieg. 386. Apoll. Arg. 1. 600. Eurip. Ph. 164. Here. Fur. 1244.— dpvovTai(v), Arat. Ph. 746. Nonn. 12. 360. Anyte Ep. 6. 2. (A. P. IX. 313) dpvvio, Od. 20. 212. Ap. Arg. 31. 1054. 1354. 4. 271.— ravvto very frequently, II. 9. 468. 17. 390. 23. 324. Arat. 183. 1010. In the derivative tenses the lengthening can be every where effected by doubling the consonant ) ; see Horn. Od. 10. 10. 21. 173. II. 9. 503. 10. 505, on the con- trary epv/ua II. 4. 137. is short ; comp. Porson, Eurip. Phoen. 997. Besides, it is not to be denied, that Epv(jaro{v) and other similar forms sometimes appear long in later poets, as Theocr. Id. 14. 35. avupvaaaa{v) Se iriirXwg, nevertheless the reduplication of and picj, which have always a short vowel, as already in Homer, II. 13. 544. xvro{v), and the like ; see Thiersch, Gr. Gr. §. 218. 58, also the tenses used by the Attics, as tziyyKa, Ktyyfiai, and the like are always short; see Buttm. Gr. Gr. §. 98, note 5. Of the other the second aorist passive kppvr\v (see Buttm. §. 100, note 7.) is in use and shortened according to the general law. When forms of it occur with a vowel, this is likewise shortened, as (pvWoppotiv, wrepopposiv and TTTepoppvuv, as Aristoph. Av. 106. 284. -n-Tspoppvti. For hppi)r)v(i>) also, examples are not uncommon in Attic authors, as Eurip. Med. 1219. lirippvivrog, Cycl. 141. pvy. For this reason the derivatives are also short, as avroppvrog, vsoppv- rog, xv^wiv), apriyyrog, 7rr]X6)(yTog } and substantives as pvqcpEvir). §. 53. On verbs in vjui, vjuai, and a/mai. 1. It has already been observed (§. 41. 2. f.) that verbs of the first of these classes lengthen the v in the second per- GREEK PROSODY. 101 son of the present, and in the singular of the imperfect and second aorist. The same takes place moreover in the penulti- mate syllable in the first and third person singular of the present, and in the third person plural, where vaai is contracted into vai. Hence Soph. (Ed. Col. 1146. Seitcvvfii, Electr. 425. Seikvihtl. Theocr. Id. XVII. 133. aTopvvmv. and the plural Horn. II. 17, 751. priyvvcri, Quint. Sm. 8, 226. pi'iyvvari; comp. Buttm. Gr. Gr. 107. 7. In like manner the participle of the feminine gender, as the accent of itself shews, is long, as Horn. 11. 8. 449. dWvaai, and also the second aorist, when it occurs, as Ev e'Su/zev. So of torrqjut, the third person plural laracnv. II. 13. 336. 2. In some instances a lengthened optative occurs in these verbs, comp. above, §. 52. 7. e. g. II. 16. 99. IkSv^sv. Arat. 817. pr}jvvaTo(v) ; see Buttm. Gr. Gr. §. 107, note 36. 3. The imperatives k\v%i and Sv&i, formed irregularly from the aorist, are long ; this the ancients already notice, as Drac. 37. 21. 58. 1. Et. M. 510. 43.; comp. II. 16, 514; so also the plural kXvtz. II. 2. 56. 18. 52. Quint. Sm. 9. 275. 14. 338. The same is observable in the corresponding formation of verbs in rifjLi, when they come from those in aw ; for, as the above mentioned lengthen the vowel, so also gtyiSl, tXtjSu, (j>a$i, and the like. On the contrary, however, when the reduplication takes place, the doubtful vowel is short, e. g. kek\v$i, II. 10. 284; see Drac. as above and 87. 1. Const. Lascar. 250. 3,. and according to the same analogy, TtrXaSi. II. 1. 586. 5. 382. Od. 20. 18. r&vaZi. II. 22. 65. SotoS*. Anyt. 1. 1. (A. P. LV. 123), &c, see Buttm. Gr. Gr. §. 107, note 11. In like manner imperatives of the kind beginning with a vowel are shortened, as opvvSi, II. 23. 585. 6 9 vv$i, 6. 360. 15. 475. opvvre, 10. 475. which all belong to the present. As in the above mentioned imperative, the forms in vfii are also shortened a. in the second person dual and plural of the present and imperfect, as II. 12. 148. ayvvrov, deUvvrov, b. In the first person plural and in the third of the imperfect, e. g. Sdicvvfxev, z&uKvvaav, Const. Lasc. 248. 15; see Sophocl. (Ed. Col. 394. loWvaav. Here also the same analogy appears 102 GREEK PROSODY. in the verbs torijjut, rXrifjn, and the like, which, where short v enters in the above mentioned, take a for ?j. 4. The infinitive present in vvai, as the ancients themselves frequently remark, is always short ; see Drac. 31. 21. Const. Lasc. 250. 4.Theod. Gaz. 79. Schaef. Apoll. Rh. p. 12 ; hence Eurip. Med. 739. Here. Fur. 1186. Theogr. 771. &iKvvvai{v). Here also a corresponding shortness takes place in torrj/xt and the like ; as l<7Tavat(a), and so also re^vavai{a) generally ; see Schaef. Gnom. p. 15., although Drac. 39. 13. is disposed to consider it as an aorist, and writes it like fyvvai, for which Schaefer quotes iEschyl. Agamemn. 540. r&vavai S' ouk ir avrepu) 5. The forms of the passive and middle in v/urn are always shortened, as apvvfxai, ayyvjiai, ^iyyvfxai, rivvfiai, &c. so Eurip. Here. Fur. 1347. KaTroZzvyvvjiiai, II. 13. 262. a7roaivu/xcu, Sophocl. Elect. 304. diroWviuLai, II. 16. 78. irepiayvvTai, Nonn. Dion. 8. 322. luiyvvTai, Quint. Sm. 8. 337. ertvuro(T), Sophocl. El. 279. loXXvTo, Nonn. 2. 174. 526. 1%™™, Callim. H. to Ap. 99. Itt^ukvihto. In like manner the imperative is short in its forms; e. g. Paul. Silent. Ep. 68. 4. (A. P. IX. 767). a X vv as axpdrjg, dyjpdav- rog(d), Nicand. Ther. 846. Anyt. 9. 4. (A. P. IX. 314). Callim. H. to Ap. 110., from icpaiaivu), dicpdavrogfi), Horn. II. 2. 138. Ap. Rh. 1. 469. Quint. Sm. 7. 522. 12. 268. 12. 526.; on the three- fold dddrov {dd) II. 14. 271., dddrog {dd) Od. 22. 5., adrog{d) Apollon. Rh. 1. 459., to which also, if the reading be correct, add Quint. Sm. 1. 217. ddrov(d), compare §. 52. 2., note 5. Buttm. Lexil. 56. ff. On the lengthening of verbs in aw, see §. 52, and on the first mentioned adjectives, Schaefer, Gr. Gnomic, p. 239. b. The feminine termination in dig is long, as 'A^ate Ku- rdtg, IlroXcjuatCj although Homer and the Epic poets have 104 GREEK PROSODY. usually 'Axaiig, &c, which is partially recommended by gram- marians in Attic writers also ; comp. Lobeck Phryn. p. 39. ff. In like manner most feminine names of the kind are length- ened; as Na/'c Anyt. 10. 4. (A. P. LX. 745), Aatg Agath. Scholast. 80. 3. Julian -Egypt. 3. 2. 4. 1. (A. P. VI. 18. 20. VII. 220) Oalg A. P. 120, together with the compounds and derivatives, as ^eveXaida, Ep. Adesp. 56. 1. (A. P. V. 2), which the corresponding Ionic forms, as Ni?te, Qvcrriig, &c, prove; see Drac. 23. 24. Reg. Pr. 118. Lastly, this measure prevails also in derivative forms, as in those in atvg and aiKog, e. g. NtKaeve, 'A^at'icoe, which Porson, Eurip. Hecub. 291. recognises as genuine Attic. On the other hand the later Epic poets have used Attic forms, as Nonn. Dion. 1. 92. 'AxatKoc. Yet here also instances of shortening are not alto- gether unknown; comp. Lobeck Phryn. 41. c. The vowel is also lengthened in names of species and proper names in awv, gen. aovog ; e. g. &Su/*awv(a) ? o7rawv(a), 'Af>£Tawv(a), AvKatov{a) ; Tvpdrrig(d), Aev Karri g(a), N«0arric(a), 'Ay^a- rris(a), are long. Also naturally the feminines derived from them are long, as 'Aaidrig, MiBtdng, Theocr. Id. XXIV. I. XVI. 20. Here r\ was predominant with the Ionians. But where, after the manner of the Dorians, they admit a in similar forms, it is also long, as Damaget. Ep. 8. 1. (A. P. VI. 438) Maxa- Note, — On the contrary, forms of this kind proceeding from short roots have the short vowel, as Aa\fjidrrig(a), ra\d- rr}g{Xa), ^aixdrr\g{jxd) . So also appellatives and proper names from short roots, as lxvofidrrig(a), Kpri[jLvofidrrig(d), Avricpd- rrig(a), 2w/cparr]c(a). g. The vowel is long in several compound words, where the length arises either by a Doric change of r? into a, or by the contraction of two vowels, or lastly by derivation from long forms. Such are the compounds in wp and opia from dviip, as ayf)vojp, dyr\vopir\, zvrjvwp, &c. in Ionic poesy, in proper names, as Bidvit)p(a), NiKavwp(d), which the ancients expressly state to be Doric; see Et. M. 9. 36. 432. 49. Diotimus, Ep. 11. 3. Bidvopi(d), Hegesipp. 3. 1. Tiiidvop^d) (A. P. VII. 261. VI. 124), so also the Doric dvopir)(d) in Anyt. Ep. 1. 4. (A. P. VI. 123). But the feminine forms have short a, as 'AvndvEipa(ia), 'Idvei- pa(dv) ; comp. §. 17. 10. c. Words from j3r)/xa, as Eurip. Rhes. 215. 8i/3ajuoc, comp. Lobeck Phryn. 431. So also compounds from Kapa and Kpiag, as jcapa^o/cctv Eurip. Heracl. 279., uped- voixog Eurip. Cycl. 245., Ksparo/nog Sophocl. El. 52. The same sometimes takes place before vowels also, as Od. 13. 81. rerpdo- poi(d), Horn. H. to Aphr. 31. rifidoxogia), and the like. On this lengthening of vowels in compounds, comp. Lobeck Parerg. to Phryn. Cap. IV. p. 633. ff. h. Those words have long a in the middle, which, coming from Ionic forms, received long a by Dorism, and passed thence into the Attic and also the common dialect, as %Kari> seePorson, Eurip. Orest. 26., and so several proper names and appella- 108 GREEK PROSODY. tives, e. g. Ylpidirog, ^Tv/uKpdXog, &dprig{a), MsvoiTiddr}g(a)> Lasc. 243. 6, SO also the similar proper names 'AXictj3iaSiie(a), Tlv\dSrig(a), Soph. Electr. 16. — In like manner substantives of the kind with their derivatives, as KiXaSog, KtXaSuv, zvKtXadog, dvaiciXaSog. GREEK PROSODY. 109 b. Adverbs in a$ov and aSrjv, as dvaaraSov, t7rKTTpo(j)adr}v(a) II. 10. 483. KaTiofiaSov 15. 352. 7rpOTpoiradr)v(a) 16. 304. o/uli- XaSov 12. 3, examples of which occur in great number; see Apollon. de adverb 562. 16. On the contrary, those derived from the first declension mostly take rj, as IXt/crjSov, Kavay^Sov, v, as 7rXarajua>v(ra), T£Xa/xa>v(a), see Drac. 87. 21. Et. M. 688. 16. Arcad. de ace. 60. 12. g. Words in avog 9 both adjectives and substantives, as 'A7n- $avog 9 fiaXavog, KOipavog, ovpavog, iKavog, [iriKsSavog, TTEVKsSavog, iriOavog, comp. Arcad. de ace. 64. 10. Lasc. 244. 3. Theod. Gaz. 73. and neuters in avov, as Spinavov, %6avov 9 Xdxpavov, lastly, 110 GREEK PROSODY. feminines in dvri, as j3oravrj(a), X€Kavrj(a), 6pKavr?(a), are- avr)(d). h. Diminutives in dpiov, as dvSptowdpiov(d), SfXrd'pfov(a), irat- Sdpiov(d), see Drac. 56. 25. 95. 20. Reg. Pr. 89. Note. — Yet it must be remarked that in later authors the lengthening of the quantity does not appear to have been unusual after the manner of the Latin poets, thus the Reg. Pr. quotes aovSdpLov(a), K£\\dpLOv(a). Note 2. Also other diminutive terminations in aSiov, as \aijnrd<$LOv{d), as also in clklov, dXig, dfitg, driov, are mostly short, e. g. TrivdKiov(a), rpofyaXig, 7rXoK:a/xte, KpoVjUartov(a),&c., unless they are derived from immediately long roots, as iXa- &ov(a), 3-wpa'»aov(a), and the like. Comp. on these forms, Fischer, Well. Th. II. 24. ff. Spohn. de extr. part. Odyss. 113. ff. i. a is short in words in apoc, as j5dpj5dpog, KOfidpog, fiap- lidpog, Lasc. 242. 21 ; so in adjectives of the like termination, as iXapog, KaSdpog, irXaBdpog, ipatydpog, comp. Drac. 74. 11. 78. 22. Reg. Pr. 102. 108. Arcad. de ace. 70. 14. Hereto belong also feminines of a similar kind, and derivatives, as ajuaprj(a), Batxaapte, 'ljcaptoc(a). Note. — The above mentioned grammarians themselves ex- cept dviapog, Ion. dvirjpog, which is to be restored in Opp. Hal. 4. 209. comp. 2. 48. Also the antepenultimate syllable of the latter word is always long, although dvTdpog and dvtdpog fluctuate, comp. §. 52. 2. note 6. At the same time, if what grammarians state concerning the formation of these adjec- tives be true, we have here an additional proof that the i in dvia is originally long. Also Svvarog, arao7c(a), GREEK PROSODY. Ill j3ovXr)vd(j>og, T(rpd)(a.. Long i in the middle Syllables of derivative words. §. 57. 1. The cases in which i appears regularly long before a vowel in middle syllables are very simple. Verbs in iw have been treated of above, §. 52. 3. ; moreover i is long a. in proper names in 7a)v, which shorten the vowel in the genitive, as 'Aju^>£wv(t), AoXtwv(7), 'I?iwv(7), Ylavduov(J.), gen. Uav^iovog(i), &c, comp. Drac. 74. 5. Et. M. 92. 1. Arcad. de ace. 18. 5. Lasc. 244. 25. Theod. Gaz. 75. The derivatives naturally follow the same measure ; e. g. II. 14. 317. 'I^Tovtrjc, Callim. H. 112 GREEK PROSODY. to Artem. 209. Arfiovidaoij), Dionys. Perieg. 1024. IlavSlovtSao, and so in the tragedians, hence the same measure is observed by the Latins, as Propert. I. 20. 31. Jam Pandionias cessat genus Orythyiae. Note 1. — Individual forms fluctuate in their quantity, as the frequent Kpovia)v, KpoviovogiJ), Kpoviiovogty, comp. de vers. Gr. Heroic. 92. Note 2. — On the contrary, those remain short, which take the long vowel in the genitive ; e. g. Bovko\uov(T), 'H«-iwv(t), Olvoiri(jjv(T), genit. OlvoiruovogiX), see Drac. 17. 17. 105. 18. Arcad. de ace. 18. 3., and here also the derivatives are short, as A.£VKa\l^r}g(X), Note 3. — 'Optwvp), 'OjOtwvoc(T), is of variable measure in Homer and the Epic poets, e. g. II. 18. 486. Od. 5. 274. 11. 572. Theocr. Id. VII. 54. Apoll. Arg. 3. 745. Arat. 232. 310. 338. Nonn. 1. 234. 359. 2. 306., but short in the trage- dians, as Eurip. Cycl. 273. Ion. 1153. and in Callim. H. to Artem. 254. Note 4. — The t is also long in certain patronymics ; as 'IaTrmovtSne Hesiod, Op. 54. Apoll. Rh. 3, 1087. 'EXarTovt&j Horn. Hym. to Apoll. 210. TaXdioviSao (To) avcucrog II. 2, 566. 23, 678. But the feminine patronymics in iwvri are short, as 'Afcoto-Twvrj, 'Iva)(LU)vrj Call. Hym. to Art. 254. h. Dissyllabic and trisyllabic appellatives in «wv with a short vowel in the genitive are lengthened, as kuov(7), iriwviT), irpiwvij), fipaxuov{~i), see Drac. 73. 22. Et. M. 674. 1. This also obtains of the derivatives, as 7napa(7), w'laXloQ, ifiriUQ, 7t7jU£Xt7, 7r~iaivd), which occurs short only in very late authors, as in Gregor. Nazianz. cited by Morell. Porson on Eurip. Med. 5. affirms the same of 7rp«uv(7), nevertheless compare what is stated in §. 52. 3. Note 1. — The word x u *> v > although quoted by Draco, 102. 17. as long, is usually shortened in the Epic poets and tra- gedians ; but the correctness of his statement appears to be proved by the derivatives, so ^tovw^c, Apoll. Rhod. 1. 826. Nonn. Dion. 3. 220., but xioviog, Bion. Id. 1. 27. Coluth. 230. Nonn. Dion. 2. 523. 4. 131. 5. 486. 10. 180. and so fre- quently in the Greek Anthology, where it is lengthened by GREEI* PROSODY. 113 means of the arsis,; rj'/'wv, iovog, II. 7. 462. 12. 31., also as a proper name, II. 2. 561. II. 12. 21. Quint. Sm. 4. 174. is constantly short. < Note 2. — As in the above-mentioned 'Opiwv, so also in the middle of some other words, Epic writers in particular some- times lengthened the i before a vowel; e. g. 7rpo'/'(t>$ic(7w) and 7raXi'w£tc(X7), Horn. IL 12. 71. Hesiod. Scut. Here. 154., which the ancients explain as contracted from 7raXtv§iw£te, and on that account lengthened ; see Heyne, II. T. VI. 288. Drac. 72. 25. t3wrtwva(7), II. 21. 169. Callim. H. to Zeus 24. Kapvicovog(l). On lengthenings of another kind, as the frequent 6/ioaou(7o) ncXt/noco ; see §. 12. and the other writings there quoted. Comparative forms in iu)v have been spoken of above, §. 46., and on words in ia; see §. 12. 1. and §. 58. 1. a — c. 2. i is long before consonants in the following cases : a. In some proper names in 7koc, e. g. Vpriv~ucog, Kai'Kog; see Arcad. de ace. 51. 23. II. 12. 21. Quint. Sm. 4. 174. b. In the termination 7Xoc, when the word is proparoxytone, e. g. aiylXog, apylXog, o/LuXog, arpofdlXog ; see Drac. 72. 2. 4. Arcad. de ace. 55. 25. So in similar feminine forms, e. g. "A&Xig in Callim. H. to Apoll. 88. which reading Arcad. de ace. 31. 20. recognises, and so also in the like neuter TriSiXov. Drac. 76. 28. Horn. II. 2. 44. 10. 22. 132. The derivatives likewise have naturally the long quantity, e. g. airediXwrogCt), 6/uuXa<$6v, &c. Note. — Masculine paroxytones in "iXog, however, are short, as ZwiXoc(t), vavriXogtf), 7rojU7n'Xoe(i) ; see Arcad. de ace. 55. 18. Also, many of those adduced occur short in later authors; so in Lycophr. 89. arpofilXov, 506. (rrpofilXog, but in Asclepiad. Ep. 6. 2. (A. P. VI. 32.) pveXoi Ik T](7T/vT)(7), Alr}Tivr](~i) , Muptvr/(7), Nrjpi)'tV7}(7), 0/c£avtv>](7), be- sides ay%iGTivr)(l), a3"£ptvr?(7), Ipyaorivrj^), T7pwtvr](7), larpLvr)(i), Tapavrivr)(~i) ; comp. Drac. 45. Heg. Pr. 90. Also, most trisyl- lables belong hereto, as a£nn?(7), Aly'tva, ^o)tlvyi{7)^ 7rim'vi?(7) ? 114 GREEK PR9SODY. • v0'i\evg{l), SepT^oc Hegesipp. 6. 6. (A. P. XIII. 12). raplxog, tpiSog, together with its derivatives, as awip'tSog, *Ep~tScudg, Theocr. Id. III. 35. Od. 6. 32. II. 18. 550. 560. Evp'nrog, Evp'nrt- Srig from plwr}. Callim. H. to Artem, 188. to Del. 45. Sophocl. A. P. II. 788. n. 90. Also ^v'nrtvg, probably connected with Ivltti) and the Homeric r}Vi7ra7re(l), according to which, however, the latter would be a compound, Trap%zvoTr'nnr)g(j) II. 11. 385. whereby a support is gained for the reading ottlttevu), dTrnrEvrrjp, instead of the more frequent 6ttitttev(v ; and in Nonnus Graefe prefers this, e. g. Dionys. 1. 85. 2. 556. 3. 270. 4. 419. Others as dSrip'tTog, aKoviTog, are lengthened on account of the long root. Shortness of i in the middle Syllables of derivative words. §.58. 1. Except the cases above given, §. 57. 1. t may be usually considered short before a vowel in derivative words ; only some observations are yet necessarily required on the termination of substantives of the first declension in ta. Grammarians, indeed, here explain the i to be in most instances short, but this is perfectly true only in words which have the preceding vowel GREEK PROSODY. 117 also short, as npatna, GicoirXd, (piXiaiXt) ; comp. Drac. 20. 20. Reg. Pr. 77. 78. Arcad. de ace. 91. 1. if. which also holds in those that shorten the final syllable, as fita(t), ir-oifirpXa ; comp. 17. 3. a. Only Sta, as formed by contraction, is here naturally excepted. Of the others: a. dissyllables beginning with two consonants are naturally long, as $p7a, orta(7), <£>$«a(7), Xia; see Drac. 48. 9. 96. 20. 22. Arcad. de ace. 98. 17. e. g. H. to Herm. 552. Callim. to Apoll. 44. Apollon. Arg. 2. 1174. Horn. II. 1. 169. 9. 253. Od. 17. 221. Theocr. Id. II. 60. Apoll. Arg. 3. 278. Note 1. — The derivatives are also naturally long, as Q&ldg, og, %tT) . Asclepiad. Ep. 28. 2. (A. P. GREEK PROSODY. 11.9 V. 185.) QvKiSiovtf), Aristoph. Acliarn. 521. Dionys. Ep. 11. 2. (A. P. XI. 182.) x Sov, as (5orpi>$6v, wpv^ov, Horn. II. 2. 89. Nonn. D. 2. 197. Nic. Alex. 46. ; comp. Apollon. de adverb. 611. 4. This partly holds of diminutives in vSiov, which follow the analogy of those in iSiov, as lx%v$iov(v) ; see Dawes' Mis- cellan. Crit. 214. Porson's Advers. 99. c. Trisyllables in wr\ also have mostly the long quantity, as SeXtyvvriiv) Dion. Perieg. 442. T(fXvvrj(u), aliXvpa(v), &c. ; so also dissyllables, e. g. Xvpa(v), Svpa(v), together with their derivatives, as Svpcuog, d^vpocrTOfiia, Xvpiicog, XvpoKTvirog. Note, — According to this analogy, the words ifk^jijivpa and 7r\riiuLfjLvpig, ought likewise to be always long ; and so Draco 74. 7. But ir\{]fifivpig, at least, occurs once short even in Homer, Od. 9. 486. and so also Apoll. Rh. 4. 1269. although usually long, e. g. Apoll. Rh. 2. 576. 4. 1241. Dionys. Perieg. 107. 202. Nonn. Dion. 23. 100.; so also with the Attics, as Eurip. Alcest. 185.; see Monk on the same passage. irXrifi- fivpa stands lengthened in Crinag. Ep. 29. 1 (A. P. IX. 291), but as properispome, 7rXryjujuvpa. Also, a later epigram has yttyvpa , see Jacobs, A. P. 904. /. Some proper names lengthen this vowel when a follows, 124 GREEK PROSODY. the reason of which quantity is to be sought for in the root, as ''Ajuppvarog, Aiovvaog Drac. 36. 6. QaXvaidSrig II. 4. 458. and so %a\vcnog(v) and $aXu<7ta(u) Theocr. "VII. 3. 31. Ka/z/3uopvr6v, Arat. Phaen. 1123. Callim. Fr. 216. i. After this specification of entire classes of words, which lengthen v in the middle syllable, several individual words remain, the reason of whose long quantity must be sought for in the root. Of these we shall give only the most common, as "Afivdog, tpvK(i)(v), together with the compound and reduplicated form, r)pvKUKe{v) and lpvKaKa{v), II. 5. 321. 11. 352. Bofi(3vicr}(v), ifjiliv%iov{v) with the Attics, djivjHi)v{v), ^AjuLVjuuvr), Alcrv/jLr}(v), dvT7](v), avriwiv), Kt\v(pog, el\v(j)dZ(jj, II. 20. 492. zikvfydZu, besides 11. 156. ukytyowv. But in KEKpv(j)aXog(v) in Nicand. Ther. 580. the length is produced by the arsis, the word itself being otherwise short ; see II. 22. 469. §. 50. 5. GREEK PROSODY. 125 Shortness of v in the Middle Syllables of Derivatives. §.60. In derivation v before consonants is to be accounted short, chiefly in the following most usual forms : a. Proper names or substantives in vKog, which are propar- oxytone, as "A/xukoc, "Ifivicog, Kupvicog Horn. Od. 5. 267. ; together with adjectives in vicog, as Aifivicog ; see Arcad. de ace. 52. 8. Note. — KtopvKog (a town) is long in Dionys. Perieg. 855., but the mountain of the same name short, Horn. H. to Ap. 39. Nonn. T>. 9. 287. KwpviciSzg. The derivatives are like- wise short, e. g. Apollon. Arg. 2. 711. 4. 855. Nonn. 1. 258. KtopvKLog(v). In Opp. Cyn. 1. 863. 'AfivKcxpovog is lengthened by arsis. * b. Nouns in vXri(v) or vXq, as apfivXr)(v), kotuXtj(u), ara(j)i)Xr}(v) (plumb-line), (rra^vXy) (bunch of grapes) ; comp. Arcad. de ace. 109. 16. Only a(f>ov^vXr}(v) is long in Aristoph. Pa. 1077. Note. — The long ax^vdvXa or kevBvXo. Epigr. Ad. 90. 5 (A. P. XI. 203) has also other difficulties. c. Feminine diminutive names and words in vXig, &s"AppvXig, AtpicvXig, QscrrvXig, a§uAt£, SriyvXig, 7rr)yvX'ig ; comp. Drac. 75. 78. Uafi^vXig is there given as an exception, with a long middle syllable, naturally on account of $i/Xov. d. Masculine diminutive forms in vXog, as well in names as adjectives, e. g. lpioTvXog{u), fwacvXog{v), Alcr)(yXog(v), Baic- XvXog((v), ( B.^vXog(v) ; see Arcad. de ace. 56. 20. and on the di- minutive forms Fischer, Well. II. 33. 23. Bast. Ep. Crit. 243. ff. Blomfield, iEsch. Prom. 214. Also words of another kind with the same termination are usually short, as mavXog, fipafivXog, SctKTvXog, KctfnrvXog, 7rirvXog, 6vdvXog, KOpSvXog(v) Opp. Hal. 1. 306. 307. 350. 6a/j.vXog(v). The derivatives and compounds retain the same measure, e. g. al/j,vXiog{v), tcaijnrvXosig, po$o- caKTvXog. Note. — *2(j>ovdviov ; so those from Uav, as Nonn. Dion. 10. 13. Udviddog — tfiapdrpa(aog(a), x«°c(«) ; but so also in those of the kind which have a consonant intervening, e. g. f3a%og(a), icapoc(a), vaKOc(a), vcnrog(a), raxoe(a), except the a stands merely as a difference in dialect for rj, and, consequently, the original quantity is naturally long, as crrdSog, jucikoq ; comp. Drac. 34. 22. 81. 10. 92. 14. Reg. Pr. 104. Et. M. 148. 3. Arcad. de ace. 195. 15. Note 1. — Only irpdyog (affair) and fyapog (robe), together with their derivatives and compounds, are excepted by the ancients, as Swirpayrig, tvirpdyia, atydpi'ig, &c. Yet Draco, the Reg. Pr. and the Etym. M. 175. 29. observe, that aog, on account of its thrice occurring long in the arsis in Homer, (comp. de vers. Her. 23. with Blomfield, Callim. to Dian. 211.) although it is true, that, like Homer, later poets measure (paea^d), and the like, particularly at the end of the verse; comp. the Jen. Litt. Zeit. 1819, No. 193. 119. Quint. Sm. 14. 183. On the interchange of iog in the Tragedians, see Elmsley, Eurip. Heracl. 969. The short- ness is also shewn by the derivatives, as (jtatvtyopir), atfvw, &c. b. a is measured short, according to the observation of the ancients, in cases where ]3 follows, as 'Aj3uSoe( w A), (3\a(3og(a), K 2 132 GEEEK PROSODY. Kaj5v(To^ev, &c. ; comp. Drac. 63. 3. 80. 9. Reg. Pr. 109. Lascar. 241. 17. Note.— "afiaXt is excepted; see the ancients, as above, and Bast. Greg. Cor. 758. 929. : so is it used in Callirn. Fragm. 455. Agath. Schol. Ep. 78. 1. (A. P. VII. 583.) 'Aj3oXe("A), jurjS' kyivovTO yd/xoi -, Ka/3aJ(a) is also long on account of the root. c. In like manner when /ul follows, e. g. "dfia^a, 'djudpa, ydfiog(d.) dajj.ap{a.), Ka/ndrog^d), rdfXi(Jog(d), &c. ; see Drac. 22. 3. Reg. Pr. 110. Arcad. de ace. 195. 26. So also similar verbs, as 'dfis'ifito, 'a/ilAyw, ^dfivvio, and others. Note. — The ancients except 'dfiato as long, but it is more properly arbitrary, although its derivatives "dfir)Tog, 'cifirjrrjp, are oftener long ; see below, in the Appendix. Natural excep- tions are formed by Spa/ma, vdjia, and the like ; see §. 55. 2. a. and those cases where the long a belongs to the Dorism, as (Ta/uta for ai]fxa. d. Paroxytones in pog are short, as Ildpog(a) ,cncdpog(d) , \dpog(d) (a bird) Od. 5. 51. ucr(x&>, fxaXdaato, ydpaaaix) , &c. g. Those compounded with a privative have this a short, as ^dtpyog, 'akwv, ^d^i/j.iXiovg is long, as Dioscorid. 28. 3. QXiovvriSog alrig; so also oe, only some Compounds follow the primitive form, as travSnp, TravSripog. Lastly, "ifirip is always short; see Dionys. Perieg. 282. 332. 334. Crinag. Ep. 45. 5. (A. P. VII. 376). d. ^Taofiat (I heal), together with its derivatives 'Jarpog, 'larrjpLov, &c. is always long in Epic authors, and written with an r) ; comp. §. 52. Note 6. On the contrary, the Attic poets have also Qmrpoc, as Eurip. Hipp. 295. Aristoph. Plut. 406. f. and the same usage is found in the Epigrammatists; see Drac. 121. e. Some proper names in which a stands shortened, as"IaP~iX6g, &c; see Drac. 35. 21. 101. 3. 163. 17. Arcad. de ace. 52. 25. and those quoted above, §. 61. 2. a. Note. — Barytones of the kind, as KriXog(T), comp. Reg. Pr. 10. are short; yet the long quantity often occurs, as wlXog 11. 10. 265.; see Drac. 73. 5. *lXog Od. 1. 259. afitXog Nicand. Alex. 624. ; so also x^ f0t (X')> xiXiaBeg, XtAwi/7), and the compounds, as II. 5. 860. SescdxiXoL. The same holds also of several dissyllables, as "7Arj, jua(7), (TfuXevTog, are pro- bably always long, for Aristoph. Thesm. 783. is suspected. On the contrary, individual words fluctuate, as (nr'iXog and v(7), Tp7ro- yivua, wfioovroc, oTro^ayoc, &c. ; comp. Drac. 82. 4. 87. 7. Et. M. 714. 43. Arcad. de ace. 79. 3. Also the oxytone adjective Xlrog is long, Arat. 8*24. and the Homeric Xltci, Od. 1. 130. ; see Wolf, Litter. Anal. IV. 501. ff. Note. — The two last proper names are distinguished 'by this means from /j.LTog(T) (thread), rpiroe(t) (third). Sometimes the short quantity occurs here in very late writers, as in an Epigram of Diog. Laert. A. P. VII. 118. 2. aairog. g. Also neuters in og, which have t in the initial syllable, are not, like those with a, comp. §. 62. 8. always shortened, but mostly long, as derived from long roots. The Reg. Pr. adduces mvog, TrvXyog, vlicog, kXTtoc, /uucrog, Xtirog, but several others have also the same measure, e. g. arlfyog, which is given as usually short, Opp. Hal. 2. 569. yEschyl. Pers. 368. rTfog Apoll. Rh. 1. 127. irlaog Apoll. Rh. 1. 1266; comp. Et. M. 673. 15. On the contrary, \'nrog$) is always short, e. g. Ni- cand. Alex. 178. 240. Callim. to Ap. 38. and \'nra{Y) often in Homer; kXTtoc is long in Apoll. Rh. 1. 599. K\iTta(7) IlaXX??- vma, short in Lycophr. 600. 707. Note. — On icXirvg connected herewith we have above observed what is necessary §. 40. 3. b. Of the given words, grammarians, indeed, usually write Xlwog as properis- pome; see Et. M. 566. 40. Drac. 62. 16. Reg. Pr. 39.; nevertheless the usage of the poets evidently establishes the contrary. In the derivatives, some of those which are long- become short, as irvlyog invariably forms irvtyoeig, &c. h. With respect to verbs, barytones have mostly l long in the initial syllable, when two consonants precede, as j3pt$w(7) Drac. 30. 21. $Xtj3w(7), irviyioij), rpt/3o>(7) ; see also Buttm. Gr. Gr. §. 7. Note 10. Individual apparent exceptions, now and then to be found, are manifestly corrupt. Note 1. — Those in which no double consonant precedes, are either short, as XiTOfixaiiT), whence Xetv (to snow), which as a verb is indeed usually long, as II. 12. 280. Asclepiad. Ep. 26. 1. Antipat. Thess. 21. 6. but short in all its derivatives, as viQadag, vtyotig, vt 0oj3Arjroe, &c. The lengthening of the verb is not infrequent, and in such instances the MSS. have sometimes vefyuv, as frequently happens in similar forms, Jacobs A. P. 67. Note 2. — The derivatives of those forms are also naturally long, yet such as come from second aorists, as irptfiov, must be considered short; e. g. Tpi(3og(T), Siarpifiri, irspirpYfifig, Apoll. Rh. 1. 1175. ; see Porson on Eurip. Orest. 62. Drac. 74. 9. This holds also of Trapaxpvxh and similar formations, as is there remarked, Buttm. Gr. Gr. §. 7. Note 11. a. aX£rpt|3avoc(7), which is sometimes lengthened in Aristoph., forms an excep- tion, and therefore probably comes immediately from the pre- sent ; see Seidler de vers. Dochm. 394. f. i. Also those verbs which are pure have mostly long i, e. g. c)7^>aw, vIkck*), crlyau), rifiao), (5iv£(t), ^ivid), /avEW, juTjmew, jUaito, irlXiio, plysb), (pl/aoa) ; so also when a vowel precedes, as aylviu), a«cp7j3ow, IXlvvtv; comp. Drac. 13. 13. 36. 3. 67. 16. 83. 12. 119. 23. Brunck. Apoll. Rh. I. 613. Schaef. Greg. Cor. 502. Buttm. Gr Gr. §. 7. Note 9, and others. Note 1. — The reason of the length of these words lies in their long root, hence also their derivatives are always long, e. g. jui/xr]jita(7), a vT/crjrr/ptov, and proper names, as B£p£i/*Kr](7), Ei/vt/ac)r]c, KXeovikoq, Tlfiayopag, Tlfio^feog, &c. Note 2. — But those verbs of the kind which come imme- diately from short roots are short, as &'/crj(T), aSudw, spin- juoc(pT), &c. Note — The constantly lengthened SlSvpajufiog is probably from some other root ; comp. Porson, Eurip. Orest. 5. d. Forms derived from the second aorist of verbs are always short, as XiirovavTrjg, XiTro-rraTpig, Anrotr/aoe, &c, which are frequent in later poets. e. Verbs which have a double o- in the middle likewise shorten the i, together with their derivatives, as rivaco-w, rivaicn'ip, n- vaKTEipog ; so also 'tjuacro-w, from Vjtiac. f. Also i is shortened in most verbs, wherein it precedes a vowel, as Stwicw, muw, iniZyio ; here, however, many exceptions are found which have already been touched upon, as laojiai, laivii), the former of which is almost always, and the latter some- times, long ; so w'laivu). On verbs in im see §. 52. 3. Note 1. — The verb xXiaivw is of variable measure, although 142 GREEK PROSODY. the long quantity might be expected ; thus long, Aristoph. Lysistr. 386. Apollon. 15. 4. (A. P. IX. 244.) : short, Aristoph. Eecles. 64. iKykUivo^v ; Sophocl. A. P. Th. II. 788. n. 90. oote %Xiaiv(t)v. Note 2. — The rule of the ancients, according to which i is by nature short in the beginning, when followed by two con- sonants, as in iax t0 > la\o£i$rig, comp. Orpheus, Lith. 277. Maecius, Epig. 7. 6. Rufinus, Ep. 36. 1. (A. P. VI. 83. V. 48.) In like manner juvodoKog Nicand. Ther. 795. dpvoTo/uog Quint. Sm. 1. 250., and even dpvog in Hesiod. ; comp. §.47. 6. Note 1. — Also SpvTo/uLog can be lengthened into Spyrofiog ; it is short in Horn. II. 16. 633. Theocr. Id. V. 64., but long in Quint. Sm. 9. 163. 453., consequently the short quantity pre- dominates in this word; see Coluth. 189. Nonn. Dion. 2. 104. Crinag. Ep. 21. 5. (A. P. IX. 419.) ; and before a vowel the same regularly holds in compounds, as Spvivog(v), SpvoKoirrig, $pvXiog(v) Dionys. Perieg. 127. 58. Tla/uLcpyXideg Nonn. Dion. 2. 38. Xi]Tog(v), vXoTrig(v). Of the first mentioned, crvXov and cjkvXov have been not unfre- quently confounded ; see Jacobs, A. P. 894. Note. — The ancients except %vXov(v), which is invariably short; on the contrary, the proper name "AE,vXog is long in Horn. II. 6. 12. Also individual masculines and feminines of the kind are long, as crrvXog (pillar), "vXri (forest, matter) with its derivatives. ri/Xrj and rvXog (weal, nail) fluctuate in their measure ; see Jacobs, A. P. 204. on "vXrj Drac. 91. 22. with its derivatives, as 'vXcuog, 'vXovo/mog, avXa(v). "YXr/, as name of a town, is short, II. 7. 221. but long, 2. 504.; comp. Mosch. Id. III. 89. and the commentators on the passage. c. Dissyllabic oxytones in vXog have the long quantity, as ■\vX6g Dionys. Perieg. 791. d. Dissyllabic paroxy tones in vfirj, as Av/iriiv), Zvjur)(v), Xv/uL-n(v) f 2u/xt7(u), see Arcad. de ace. 110. 13., so also the derivatives, e. g. Zvixwjia{v) Nicand. Alex. 521. 525. Note. — On the shortening of Au/xam(u), in which case the accent must be placed according to the analogy of 'P^vam, $wicaia, see Meineke, Euphor. 137. e. Neuters in v/ma have usually the long vowel, as ^vjua, Kv/ma, Xvfia, and also trisyllables of the kind, e. g. aprv/ma, a'Xv/m, iXv/ua, iSpv/uia ; hence also the derivatives, as eyKv/uLUJv(v), KVfia- touQ, Sv/uLia/uia, Sv/jnarripiog, &c. are long, ipvfia is short; comp. §. 52. 6. a. Porson, Eurip. Ph. 997. Note. — When the ancients adduce these as regularly short, as also the similar wXvfxaty), />vjua(u), \vixa(v), this happens GREEK PROSODY. 145 according to the analogy of Kpi/ua, comp. §. 64. 2. c. It is certain, also, that 7r\v/xa(v) is invariably short, comp. §.51. 3. a. pv/ma, indeed, fluctuates, occurring both long and short in our editions ; but pv/uia(v) (river) must be distinguished from pv/ia (drawing, protection), see Herm. Orph. Hymn. X. 22. Lastly, KVfia is excepted as always, and Svfia, besides Av/.(a, as usually long ; comp. Drac. 57. 4. 100. 20. Reg. Pr. 101. Et. M. 545. 4. The reading Xv/aa, which is probably connected with Xoww, has now properly been adopted in Attic authors also ; comp. Seidler, Eurip. Troad. 608. Blomfield, iEsch. Prom. 715. f. Dissyllabic oxytones in v/uiog are long, as Spd/nog, Svfiog, Kpu/xoc, pvjuoQ, and also the derivatives, as Sv/maivto ; see Drac. 79. 8. 101. 10. Reg. Pr. 120. Arcad. de ace 196. 16. Et. M. 568. 34. Note.— Of the first there is a heteroclite plural §pu/m, which is short in Horn. Od. 10. 150. Quint. Sm. 2. 383. ; long in Opp. Cyn. 1. 64. Dionys. Perieg. 492. : comp. Herm. Orph. Argon. 681. g. Dissyllabic feminines in wrj, as 'Bvvr}(v), fxvvr}(v), Q>pvvn(v), see Drac. 29. 5. 31. 23. 64. 20. 94. 19. Reg. Pr. 32. 71. Arcad. de ace. 193. 27. Et. M. 243. 22. Horn. Od. 21. 111. Asclepiad. 27. 6. (A. P. V. 181.) : so always the Doric ™vr,(v), Drac. 89. 11. 106. 20. Note. — yvvrj is invariably excepted; see above, §. 59. 2. d. note 2. h. Dissyllabic masculines in woe, e. g- Tpvvog, Qpvvog, and the oxytones, as ypvvog, Svvog, Zvvog, together with their derivatives, as Zvvi'iuv, Svv'ig, Svviig, B&vvog ; see Drac. 93.21. Reg. Pr. 17. Arcad. de ace. 193. 16. Yet the last, as has already been observed, §. 59. 2. d. is also used short, and Trivvrog has always the short measure. i. Also neuters in og, which have v in the initial syllable, mostly lengthen this and are properispome, e. g. Kv^og, tevtyog, cncvTog, rpvyog, ipv^og, and so also the derivatives, as KvSiinog(v), icvSiau), KvSiavEipa, (j>vkiov, aicvTOTOiiog, see Reg. Pr. 42. Note. — On some of these doubts exist, as even the adduced canon itself gives the reading rpvxog, to which Jacobs, A. P. L 146 GREEK PROSODY. 149 refers, but this is decidedly' long, see Eurip. Electr. 497. Also (TKvrog is doubted, having formerly stood short in Theocr. Id. XXV. 142, in which passage, with Toup and others (see generally his Curas novissim. in Suid. p. 159.), cncvXoc is now read. gkvtoq still stands short in Lycophr. 1316, where, probably kvtoq ought to be written, if that doctrine be correct. For this is decidedly always short, although the above-mentioned canon includes it as long ; comp. Sophocl. Trach. 12. Eurip. Cycl. 398. Lycophr. 73. In like manner those of the kind which come from short roots are short; e. g. fxvaogiv), Eurip. Here. Fur. 1127. (ttvjoq(v), (TTinrogiv), rpv(j)og{v) } which, perhaps, is to be read in that canon for rpvypg. k. Also several dissyllables in vpog are always long, as irvpog, rvpog, yvpog ; so also ^Kiipog (the island), Kvpog (Cyrus), yvpog (ring), Paul. Silent. Amb. 197. : in like manner the feminines in r) and w, as icvpri, Callim. to Ap. 88. Mvpw, Tvpw, yet the former proper name is frequently written Motpw, and with some ap- pearance of truth, as Mvpa) is not infrequently short ; see Jacobs, A. P. 42. Also xpvaog, with its derivatives, is always measured long by the ancients ; see Drac. 102. 5. 120. 4. Lascar. 246. 5. Nevertheless modern scholars have started many doubts to the contrary ; see the Appendix. Note. — Tvpogiv) (the town) is short, Dionys. Perieg. 911 ; so also *2vpia, *2vpiog(v), and its derivatives. L Of verbs most barytones with their derivatives are long, as j5pv\w(v), 7ru3"w(u), Tpvxwfi), $pvyw(v), \pv%(i)(v) ; hence also ^vxhy and the like : but Tvxn(v), from efv^ov, comp. Buttm. Gr. Gr. §. 35. note 10. Note.— yXixf) to(y) is short, with its derivatives, as yXxxpa- vov(y), y\vig, &c. : Tvfywiy) is long, Apoll. Rh. 2. 134., but TixpiDEvg, Tvatov, Tvcpaoviog, and the like, usually shortened ; on the contrary, rixpwg (whirlwind), is long in yEschyl. Agam. 661., as also Tvc^w, Sept. contr. Theb. 517., and ibid. 511. irvpTTvoov, Tixpiov 1\^l. The distinction of measure between Tvtywv and Tu(t)£vg is also pointed out by Meineke, Euphor. on the adduced passage, and is thoroughly established in Nonnus ; e. g. Dion. I. 367. 382. 386. 402. 463. 502. 503. GREEK PROSODY. 147 524.; comp. with I. 155. 184. 204. 258. 287. 297. 352. 380. 507. 520. 534. ; so Tva6viog is always measured, as I. 223. 375. 413. 472. 512. in. Of verbs pure the above-quoted rule of the ancients (§. 51, 4.) holds only of the shortening of v in those which are derived either from verbs that have a liquid letter for characteristic or from some other short root, as orvytw ; on the contrary, those derived from long roots are long, especially ]3pux" w ? Kv$tdu> 9 juvkow, vpa (hammer), vpaiva(v),0])h. Hal. L 172.; so also fxvpiog, which Drac. 65. 19. improperly shortens, and which is always long in both significations, /uLvpaiva(v)j but fivpov(y) (ointment) always short, vvaog, TvSevg, 'vfiog, 'v/mug, &c. Note 1. — It is evident, also, that all words derived from long- roots of the kind retain the long quantity. Besides gvkov, avicia, ic\og(v), Soph. Electr. 890. Note 2. — In other instances, particularly in tetrasyllable verbs, the length is produced by means of the arsis alone, as in the frequent Epic juvdaXiog, while juLv^au) is always short, although /uLvdaiva) appears lengthened, Apoll. Rh. 3. 1042. 1247. Lycophr. 1008. So also in Hesiod. Op. 530. iivXiotovTzg, while fuivXaZ, fiv\ri(v) 9 fivXrityaTog, and the like, are always short. Perhaps, also fivyaXert, Nic. Ther. 816. belongs to this class. More definite cases are Svvaimsvog, %vyaT£pog x 'OAa/co- fxwpoi, and the like ; comp. de vers. Her. 74. f. Note 3. — Individual words are found, which fluctuate in their quantity, as Kuprjvrj, vdiu), vSup ; see the Appendix. L 2 148 GREEK PROSODY. Shortness of v in the beginning of Words. \. 67. On the shortness of v in the beginning of words few certain rules can be laid down for radical syllables, as even the ancients are almost entirely silent upon the subject. The necessary obser- vations on some derivative cases have been made above, §. 52. 4. f. and in the notes to §. 66. Hence we shall here give 1. only some compounds, in which v appears in the beginning of the word ; this is the case : a. In derivatives from monosyllables in vg, as jjlvq, avg, vg, e. g. juvoKTovoQ, iuvo^,og{v), Gvfia)TY}Q, 'vtyopfiog ; so also from Spvg ($pvoxog(v). Only here the arsis sometimes lengthens the quantity, as has already been remarked, §. 65. 13. and §. 47. 6. b. In compounds of Trvp, as Trvpdypa, 7rvpaicav%a, irvpLKjir\Tog, &c. ; see Lascar. 246. 3. Note. — Here, however, individual instances of lengthening are found, as Horn. II. 2. 848. Ylvpaixjmng, although Aristoteles, Gr. Anth. I. 116. 42. measures YLvpaix/uiVG' irvpavaT-qg (moth) is likewise long in a fragment of iEschylus : di^oiKa fiiopov Kapra irvpavaTov jiopov. Yet there probably the reading should be TrvpKavarov. Others, which are always long, do not come from nvp, as Trvpa/jLig (pyramid), Drac. 78. 8. Uvprivn Crinag. Ep. 21. 4., livpnvaia 28. 1. (A. P. IX. 430. 283.) the Pyrenean moun- tains. We have the same fluctuation of MSS. in Dionys. Perieg. 288. 338. where now double p stands. Also Ylvpa/uLog, as a proper name, is long, Nonn. Dion. 6. 345. 12. 84., as a river, short, Dionys. Perieg. 867. Hvpa/moio. c. Compounds from the inseparable particle <>vg, as ^vcrdrjg, SvcrdpzGTog, Svcrfivejuiog, ^xxjbjvvfiog, Sec. d. Forms compounded from the preposition aw, as avvriXvairj, (Tvvotypvgtf), a%og(v), Kpvozig, &c. The measure of verbs in vw, however, is different, comp. §. 52. 3. ff. b. Verbs which have double a in the middle shorten the vowel, together with their derivatives ; thus tyvkavais), pvdcrv\aE,(v), ^uAa/a'}, (ppvay/uatf), &c. c. Derivatives from short roots are likewise naturally short- ened, especially those from the second aorist of verbs; e. g. Kpv7p (air), rarely 'arjp; see §. 52. 1. c. Note. ^ar}Tog. y aUrog, 'atrog (eagle); comp. §. 52. 1. c. Note, and Elmsley, Eurip. Bacch. 757. Aiylva, rarely An/tva (JEgina) ; see §. 57. 2. d. Note. ,w At%7c(T), '"A/'c^e (Hades), Porson, Eurip. Hecub. 1018. Meineke, Menand. 334., and in later authors, as "AiStw, Jacobs, A. P. 374. '"Atgoe, Horn. II. 3. 322. 6. 284. and elsewhere; so "AiEa Apoll. Arg. 3. 61. 4. 1510. aido viog(i), Nonn. Dion. 5. 411. ^aiSaXi'ig and "asL^aXrjg (ever-blooming) ; comp. §. 53. 1. a. Yet instead of the first Ruhnken on Tmiaeus 24. reads afi^i^aXrjg or av^&aXi'ig. ''aL(T(no (I rush) usually, but also 'eu'(xvoc ? as also in other cases but only in the arsis; comp. de vers. Gr. Her. 22. Drac. 18. 1. 120. 14. Et. M. 794. 4. dirvtoiy) and dirvto{v) (to resound, murmur); see §. 52. 5. As has there been observed, the same fluctuation takes place in most verbs in vto, chiefly in those of two or more syllables, which have the preceding syllable long. Therefore the individual words need only be adduced, when they deviate in the aorist. apa and aga (indeed, therefore) already distinguished by the accent. ^agd and 'aga (prayer, curse), the latter Attic, in Epic authors infrequent and only in the thesis, Maltby, Morell's Thes. 132. Note; so also in the compounds and derivatives, as in Pseudo-Phocylides 16. lirdpamfiog. 'dpdofxai (T pray) Epic, 'dpio/nat Attic. " w Ap?7c and "'Aptfg (Ares), this in Homer in the arsis, with later authors also out of it; comp. de vers. Gr. Her. 23. Thai. Miles. Ep. 2. 5., with the Attics mostly short. ^ApKTToriXrjg (Aristotle), lengthened "ApKjTOTiXrjg only by Di- ogenes Laert. A. P. VII. 107. 1. "apujTov Homeric, "dpiaTov Attic (breakfast) ; comp. Clarke on II. 24. 124. Od. 16. 3 , who wishes to change these passages. After the example of Homer, later writers have also shortened the verb 'dptxTrdto, Jacobs, A. P. 722. dg termination of the accusative plural of the first declension, in Doric and later poets also dg ; see §. 28. 4. Note. "daiog (slimy) and "'Aaiog (Asian), from a hero Asias, have been distinguished by the ancients themselves, although not with perfect certainty, as the long quantity may be produced by the arsis ; see Hermann, H. H. to Apoll. 250. ; so usually "Aaig, "Ao-i'Soc, but 'dviog, Naecke, Chceril. 125. 'A<7K:Xrj7rioc and 'A%i§r}g(T), subsequently also QovKv$[Srig{T) ; comp. Christodor. Ecphr. 372. 6pf}'t%, VkocP), and Vkoc(7) (Thracian), so also in the derivatives ; comp. §. 45. 1. Note 1. SplSaZ, and Spi$a%$) (lettuce) ; see §. 62. 2. a. Note. Splov and Sp'iovtf) (fig-leaf); the latter, how T ever, is not certain; see §. 58. 1. a. Note 2. Jacobs, A. P. 621. who proposes Spvov(v). But adjectives compounded from it occur short, as Nicand. Ther. 875. XeTTToSpioiotf). ^laivix) and Tcuvw (I warm, cheer), the latter usually where the augment is prefixed, but sometimes also without it, Horn. Od. 22. 59. Quint. Sm. 10. 127. 'laXvcroQ and 'IaAuo-oc (lalysus, name of a town), Ion. 'IrjAvcroc, adjective 'laX{xnog(v) ; comp. 61. 2. f. '~iaof.iai{a) and 'tao/xat(a) (I heal), so "larpog and "tarpoc (physician), and also in other derivatives, yet the shortness is much more rare; comp. §. 64. 1. d. Drac. 51. 21. Porson, Praef. to He- cub. XVII. 158 GREEK PROSODY. ^ax^ia) (I cry) in the present, "7axov and "myov in the imperfect, by adding or omitting the augment ; comp. de vers. Her. 130., although Draco considers the vowel common, 53. 24. The Attics said also laxfi and Xd^juv according to Elmsley, Soph. GEd. T. 1222. Eurip. Heracl. 752. Med. 147. But others, as Seidler de vers, dochm. 263. write Icucxv and laicx&v. ^iSaXifiog (sultry), Hes. Op. 417. ISaXi/mog (experienced) for d- ^aXifxog. 'ISpvmg and 'iSpvmg (placing), the latter in later authors; see §. 52. 6. b. r up6g and "iepog (sacred), contr. *7p6g, the lengthening of the trisyllabic form is Epic, and in that case falls in the arsis, Brae. 52. 9. 74. 17. 'Zr? and 7^ as interjection; comp. §. 64. 1 f. Note 1. th ir)fiL and "!r)iiL, this more Attic, that more Epic ; yet neither exclusively ; examples are collected by Maltby, Morell's Thes. Gr. Pros. 938. ; comp. §. 62. 3. a. I//7ru|, vyog, and 'lti7rvyiog(v) (Iapygian) ; see §. 50. 9. a. Note. The former, however, as we have there seen, is not altogether certain. "i^vvto and 'TS-uvw (I go, direct myself), according to Drac. 53. 4. yet the passages, in which it formerly stood short, have been altered in the older poets, as Horn. II. 8. 110. Hes. Op. 265. Spohn on the passage and Schaefer, Gr. Gnom. 224. There- fore the short quantity is yet found only in very late authors, Jacobs, A. P. 846. r wavto(a) (I come), imperf. °7icavov and "Xkclvov, with or without the augment, comp. Horn. II. 6. 321. 8. 147. 10. 96. 6. 297. 8. 186. 9. 354, &c. r 7/c£a-ta and "ifcEo-ta (supplication, petition), the former Epic, the latter Attic, and so also the derivatives, as iKiaiog. "7kw (I come), in Homer usually long, Od. 9. 20., in the middle with or without the augment 'T/cojurjv and 'uco/xtjv. *'~i\aog and v X\aog (propitious) ; see §. 62. 1. b. Note. So the verb iXdo/nai interchanges; comp. §. 52. 2. Note. "7 fiag and "t/xac (thong), the latter usually, the former in Homer, II. 8. 544. 10. 475. 23. 363. Od. 21. 46. and so in the Alexandrine writers; comp. Brunc. Apoll. Rh. 2. 67. 1 APPENDIX. 159 *ar\fii (I know), y '~ia\og(v) (veil, net) ; see §. 59. 2. a. K7}pu£ vKog (herald), perhaps also Kiipvicog, so at least its deriva- tive Kr}pvKiov{v), besides the regular Kr\pvKiov(v) ; comp. Jacobs, A. P. 680. KiXavio(a) (I reach) Epic, Kiyxavto(a) or Kixav^ia) Attic; see 160 GREEK X PROSODY. Monk, Eurip. Hipp. 1442. §. 51. 2. Note 2., "where several examples of the kind are adduced. icXriiQ "i^og (key), also' icXatSoeflQ ; see Meineke, Euphorion 137. k\itvq(v) and kXitvq{v) (declivity); comp. §. 40. 1. 3. Note, where the irregular measure of similar nouns is also touched upon. Meineke, Menand. 44. has also pointed out Ix^vg with a short final syllable. koXXlZ,, Ticog (a kind of bread), also KoXXiKog ; see Porson, Ad- vers. 142. Kov'ia(i) and KOv'ia(X) (dust); comp. §. 58. 1. b. Kopvvn(v) and Kopvvn(v) (club) ; comp. §. 59. 2. c. Note, so also the verb Kopvvdw{y). Kvavsog Epic, Kvdveog Attic (dark) ; comp. §. 66. 1. c. Kvprivr) and Kvprivr) (Cyrene), long in Apoll. Rh. 1. 500. Callim. to Art. 206. short in Callim. to Apoll. 72. 93., in like manner Nonn. Dion. 5. 216. Kvpfiv-qg, 516. Kvpi)vr); comp. also Meineke, Cur. Crit. 33. ff. Xdyvvog, more rarely Xdyvvog (bottle) ; comp. §. 59. 2. d. Xd^prj, XdSpa, and XdSpd (secretly); see §. 21. 3. so in some similarly formed adverbs, either according to difference of derivation or to peculiarities of dialect. Xdiciii) (I make a noise), in the aor. 1. Aa*o?<7at and XaKriaai; see Elmsley, Eurip. Med. 147. Xaplvog and Xaptvog, so Xapog and Xdpog(a) are distinguished also in the signification ; see §. 63. d. Note. The same obtains of Xdplg, synonymous with Xdpog(d), Leonid. Tarent. Ep. 74. 5. (A. P. VII. 652), but Aapig name of a river in Lycophr. 725. Xit]v(i) and Xiijv(i) (very, violently), fluctuating from the time of Homer. Neither does the long quantity always fall in the arsis. Besides the passages where icai X(r}v begins the verse, it stands long in the thesis, Od. 8. 231. 15. 405. 16. 86. and so in later poets, Apoll. Rh. 3. 1079. Quint. Sm. 4. 459. and elsewhere, Jacobs, A. P. 81. The Attics interchange also X(dv(X) and Xidv('i), Porson, Praef. Eurip. Hecub. XVII. Mark- land, Eurip. Iphig. in Aul. 304. Elmsley, Med. 899. a. Xt7rapoe (fat), but X'nraprjg (constant), whence the verb APPENDIX. 161 Xiiraptw with a long vowel ; see Markland, Eurip. Iphig. Aul. 304. Blomfield, ^Esch. Prom. 529. On the contrary, AiVoe(i) (fat), although considered as long by some grammarians, is probably always short; see §. 64. 2. g. Aovicag and Aovicag{a) (Luke) in Christian poets. Similar instances of the shortening of proper names in ag are often met with in the Doric and later poets ; comp. Jacobs, A. P. 7. 404. 832. Xvro)p(v) and \vr(Dp(v) (deliverer), the latter according to Drac. 63. 20. Nevertheless, the verse quoted in support of it from Leonid. Alex. Ep. 29. 4. (A. P. IX. 351.) has pfcopa{v), which also stands in the Palat. MS. Hence Xvrripiog, besides the usual Xvrrjpiog, will also admit of doubt, although we have fiovXvrog and fiovXixrig, besides Xvcrig(v), aXvrog, and similar shorts ; see §. 52. 4. e. and f. juaivtg idog, also juuuv&oq(j) (a kind of fish) ; see §. 35. 2. d. Note. juLavid(T) (madness), Mavw (proper name of an Attic female slave). MatcpTva and Maicpiva (feminine proper name) ; see Jacobs, A. P. 438. Ma^ifXlvog and Ma^ifxivogij), so also similar proper names, originally long, but shortened in later authors to suit the exigency of the verse, as Kov<7ravTivog(t), r Vov(j)ivLog(a; see §. 18. Note. %vpov(v) (razor) is given by Drac. 121. 16. as arbitrary, yet it is always short in Epic and Attic authors; for %vp6g Drac. 118. 25. probably \vv6g is to be read. fZwo(v) (I scrape, polish), in the aorist only i^vaa, at least the measure e^vaa is suspected; see §. 52. 4. c. APPENDIX. 163 dia and iroia (what, relative and interrogative), sometimes short in later authors ; see §. 17. 7. Note. olZvpog (wretched), olZvpog in Aristophanes ; comp. §. 59. 2. i. Note. 6fxoi'iog(i) (like), in the genitive also 6fiouov(J) } often in Homer ; see Hermann, Elem. Doctr. Metr. 56. de vers. Gr. Her. 85., where similar examples are adduced, as ayptou(7), *l\iov(7), from individual passages in Homer, as also those occur- ring in later authors; see §. 57. 2. b. Note 2. omoplvog (autumnal), and opSplvog (early), also oirwptvog and opSpivog ; see §. 58. 2. f. Note. opvtg and opvig (bird), in the genitive always opvlSog ; see §. 33. b. Note. opTrr]^ tjkoq (shoot), Doric 6p7raKOQ ; opwaKog, which occurs only once, is not unsuspected ; see §. 43. 4. Note. "6ig for"6vpiri, 'lirirovog, &c. ; see also Friedemann de Med. Syllab. Pent. 357. Also 'oiawog in Opp. Cyn. 4. 373. would belong to the same, but, according to the very correct observation of Jacobs, A. P. 181. f. the reading olavivog ought to be substituted. ocjnoveog (of serpents), poetically often ocfnovtog, so Opp. Cyn. 2. 237. 3. 436. ; see de vers. Gr. Her. 79. ircnrvpog, rarely irairvpog (papyrus) ; see §. 60. h. Note. irag, Traaa, irav (every), in the genitive 7raa7jc(a), in very late au- thors also Tracrr)g(a) ; see Jacobs, A. P. 429. 431. Traofxai (I acquire), liraa-ajULi^v, in the perfect Treirafim, ttcloj or wared) (I taste), liraav(TKw (I shew, say) ; comp. §. 50. 9. TrXruujULvpLQ and TrXruu/Livpig (flood), yet the latter only in indivi- dual passages in Epic authors; comp. §. 59. 2. e. Note. Brunck, Apoll. Rh. 4. 1269. -rrvTyog (suffocation), and 7rvtyw(7) (I suffocate), usually long; comp. §. 64. 2. g. and Lobeck, Phryn. 107., the aorist 2. lirvi- ynvtf), with its derivatives, as -rrvtyevg, irvtyoug, &c. is short. irplv{~i) and irpivft) .(before) ; see §. 35. Note, although the latter has often been disputed. 7rptwv(7) (saw), only very rarely irptwv(T), comp. §. 52. 2. 7TTa£ aKog (hare), in ^Esch. tttcikoq; see §. 43. 4. a. 7rweX£c and ^vcXfe (hollow of a ring in which the stone is set), the latter Attic, the former Epic. TrvsXogiv) and 7rve\og{v) (trough) ; comp. §. 66. 1. b. Note. irvpai^jnf\g and Trvpai Yjicije, also Trvpafiog and wvpapog ; see §. 67, 1. b. Note. pafyavig idogtf) and idog (radish) ; comp. §. 36. 2. d. Note. pnrig iSogtf) and t$og (fan) ; see as in the preceding. pig Tvog (nose), piva(T) only in later authors; comp. Jacobs, A. P. 729. pvfia (draught, protection), pvp.a(v) (river), distinguished also in signification ; see §. 66. 2. e. Note. pvrlg, in Christian poets also pvrig, comp. Jacobs, A. P. 726. pvrov (cup), to be distinguished from pvTa, ra (reins) ; see §. 54. 6. a. Gaipw (I open the mouth, laugh at " scornfully), in the perfect (TE(jr}pa, Dor. aiaapa, particip. crearipdyg, G£ Nicand. Ther. 1. 653. iEsch. Agam. 563., hence also mvigfat) (robber) Callim. to Apoll. 95. (jivEa[~i) Nicand. Alex. 231., unless this be corrupted. ^iGV(pog(J) (Sisyphus), the measure ^icrvQogij), formerly in Theognis, 711. 715. has been altered by Jortin and by Porson, Advers. 313., and the Cod. Mutinens. collated by Bekker verifies the proposed changes. alTog (corn, food), so in all compounds and derivatives, only aaiTog in very late authors ; see §. 64. 2. f. ^tpig (the Nile with the Ethiopians), Dionys. Perieg. 223., in Lycophr. 856. 978. (name of a river and of a town in Italy) long, Drac. 81. 25. quotes cnpog (pit) as short, and proves this quantity by a fragment of Euripides, but adds that it is lengthened in common usage. ^kvXXt} andS^AXa (Scylla) ; see §. 17. 7. Note 1. (tkvXov (skin stripped off, spoil), in this form always long ; see 166 GREEK PROSODY. §. 66. 2. b., but gkv\oq{v) is short, Nicand. Alex. 270. Theocr. Id. 25. 142. Hicvpog (the island), (Ticvpov(v) (an herb), Nicand. Ther. 74. (tkvtoq and $(i)p and f 'vSup (water), Drac. 91.2. de vers. Gr. Her. 23. f., the Epic lengthening falls mostly in the arsis ; derivatives and compounds have the same fluctuation. f vET6g and 'vzrog (rain) ; comp. §. 54. 4. vl6g(T) and vlogiX) (son), the latter already in Homer ; see §. 6. 5. a., where similar instances of a diphthong shortened before a vowel are quoted from Epic and Attic authors. w uA*7 (forest, matter), "YXrj (name of a town in Bceotia) long in Horn. II. 2. 500. Mosch. 3. 89. as plural, short in II. 7. 221., where some therefore read "YSrj (a town in Lycia) ; see Heyne on the passage. v/uuv and v/jXv (to you), in Epic mostly v/m/uiv; comp. §. 34. r i>luLug always, Drac. 90. 17. Yet perhaps also 'vfiiwv in Paul. 7 168 GREEK PROSODY, Silent. Ep. 37. 7. unless with Jacobs the end be measured as a spondee. f 'virarog (highest, consul), 'virariog (consular), lengthened by the arsis; Julian JSgypt. 50. 1. (A. P. VII. 591.), so "Ynaxta and ^Yiraria (name of a celebrated woman). c vTTox£Ttv(jt) and 'u7ro^£r£uw, which Naecke on Choeril. 118. f. quotes from Empedocles, is of the same kind as SvyaripoQ, Svva/mivoio ; comp. §. 10. b. r v(j)aivu) (I weave), in later authors also 'vfyaivto, see Jacobs, A. P. 189. 652. a) (proper name, particularly of the celebrated tyrant of Agrigentum), tyaXdpig (water-hen) ; see Aristoph. Acharn. 877. (pdog(a) (light, eye), in the plural also fydsatyd) by virtue of the arsis; comp. §. 53. a. Note 2., so also in the compounds, as Opp. Hal. 2. 6. irspi^dia /cu/cAa. QapjuaKog (mixer of poison), Aristoph. Ran. 734. Equit. 1405., in older poets also (pap/uLaicog, Gaisford, Hephaestion 274. Blom- field, ^Esch. Prom. 981. fyapog (veil, robe), sometimes also aSdvio(d) (I am beforehand), the former Homeric, the latter in Attic and later authors ; see §. 51. 2. Note. 1. (jiSivtoiJ) (I destroy) Epic, 0$ivw(t) Attic ; comp. §. 51. 3., so the synonymous 03"£w(7) and ^Siwp), see §. 52. 2. b. (j>i\og(X), cj>i\og(j.) or (plXog (dear). The long quantity is not APPENDIX. 169 infrequent in Homer; see Heyne, Th. 4. 586. Also in the verb the same distinction appears to obtain, as in Kupw(v) kv- pko, juapTvpoiaai(v) fiapTvpio/nai, the aorist especially occurs long, as l0iXao(t), £^)iXaro(7), (j>i\aro(J), and so in long com- pounds, as tXwv(t), t\aivtov } &C. otvLKeog(J) (of purple), but Qoivlkoeiq, e. g. Hes. Scut. Here. 194. Horn. EL 10. 133. ^oLvXicoeaarav, unless here, as Clarke proposed, the word should be read trisyllabic and tetrasyllabic ; see Heyne on the passage. (poiraXwg and (poLraXwg (wandering), the latter only in some Lyrical passages of the Tragedians; comp. §. 56. 2. Note. t *ov£i>G (murderer), in the accus. Att. ov£a, sometimes also 0o- vka ; see §. 50. 2. a. ff. and some examples of the kind in Meineke, Menand. 387. Qopicvg and Qopicvg, in the genit. vog and vvog (proper name) ; see §. 40. 1. (ppiap (well), in the genit. Qpdarog, (j>piarog, and Qp-qTog Epic, QpsaTog Attic ; see §. 26. 3. Note. vra\ir) and fyvTaXrii (nursery, plantation), the latter Epic, from the short Qvtov ; comp. §. 54. 4. g. XfocOD (Chios), XToc (Chian) ; see §.64. Lb. Note. xXTcuvw and yXiaivi*) (I warm) ; comp. §. 65. c. 1. xXtSr)(t) (luxury, dress), usually short, yXl^y]^) long in Pseudo- Phocylid. 200. Xpi<*>(J), rarely XP 1 ' W 00 0- anoint) ; see §. 52. 3. Xpv(Teog(v) and xpvcr£oc(u) (golden), the former Epic, the latter in Attic and Lyric authors. This shortness has been at va- 170 GREEK PROSODY. rious times pointed out; comp. Erfurdt, Soph. Antig. 103. small edit. Hermann de Dial. Pind. 9. Seidler, Eurip. Troad. 596. Elmsley, Med. 618. Bacch. 97. and against the au- thority of so many passages referred to by those scholars the use of the short quantity will not admit of being alto- gether denied. But in the Epic and Elegiac poets the sub- ject may still require a more accurate investigation. I was not ignorant, as has been supposed, of Wernicke's assertion, Tryphiodor. 513., that the later Epic poets shortened this vowel without scruple; but I hesitated to assent to it, as , founded solely upon his own canon, that these poets from the time of Nonnus never combined two spondees in hex- ameter. The passage of Hedylus, quoted by Jacobs, A. P. 187. would seem more deserving of attention. Yet even this is rendered doubtful, first by the frequent lengthening of Xpvvdg together with its derivatives in the thesis, and secondly by the usage of the compounds, of which these Epic poets have often xpiKjeoKoXkriTog, xpixrtoXiicTOQ and the like formations, but never e. g. ^pv(T£avy{)g, on the contrary always ygvaavyfe, lengthening the vowel even in the thesis; see Nonn. Dion. 11. 19. Paul. Silent. Amb. 160. 263. Whereas if the shortening of the vowel had been so easy and common to these poets, as one should be led to conclude according to Wernicke, they would also, in order to gain a dactyl to the rhythm, have used yjpvcjzavyi]Q, &C. 'I2pito>v(t), 'Gpta>v(t), and 'Gapuov(T) (Orion) ; see §. 57. 1. a. Note 3. wpvoiJ.at(i>) and wpvofiai(v) (I howl) ; comp. §. 54. 5. Note. — In proper names the later poets particularly, and above all the Christian, have often arbitrarily shortened or even lengthened the quantity. Many examples have been given in the introduction, as also in this Appendix ; others, as 'EXcucriviSije, are touched upon by Hermann, Elem. Doctr. Metr. 44., and several more may be found in Jacobs, A. P. 24. 424. 496. 684. INDEX. A. a fin. in words of 1 decl. §. 16. §. 17- §. 19. in nomin. of 1 decl. §. 16. §. 17- §.19. in vocat. of 1 decl. §. 15. §. 19. in Dor. genit. of 1 decl. §. 19. 4. note. in nom. ace. and voc. dual of 1 decl. §. 19. 5. in neut. plur. of 2 decl. and in sing, and pi. of 3 decl. §. 20. 1. in accus. of 3 decl. §. 20. 2. in dat. of 3 decl. §. 20. 3. in numerals, §. 21. 1. in adverbs, §. 21. 2. 3. in prepos. and partic. §. 21. 4. in verbs, §. 22. ■ — in tbe perf. and aor. 1. act. §. 22. 1. in verbs in aio, §. 22. 3. contr. from ao in 2 pers. aor. 1. mid. §. 22. 4. a in penult, and antepenult, syll. of decl. §. 43. §. 44. — in penult, syll. of verbs, §. 50. — in penult, syll. of aor. 2. and fut. 2. §. 50. 3. — in penult, syll. of perf. 1. and 2. §. 50. 5. 6. 7- — in penult, and middle syll. of deriva- tives, §. 55. §. 56. — in initial syll. of words, §. 62. §. 63. — for the Ion. rj, §. 62. 2. d. — in init. syll. of neut. of 3 decl. §. 63. 1. a. followed by j3, §. 63. 1. b. ■ foil, by ft, §. 63. 1. c. of verbs in ccro), §. 63. 1. f. — priv. in words, §. 63. 1. g. -act, nom. of 1 decl. §. 16. 1. ddarog, aarog, §. 55. 1. a. dayrjg, §. 55. 2. c. aaaa, daad\i,r\v, §. 52. 1. note 5. ddo;, ddofiai, §. 52. 1. note 5. d(3dXi, §. 63. 1. b. "Afiapig, §. 62. 2. e. -a(3og, gen. from nom. atp, §. 43. 9. "A(SvSog, §. 59. 2. 1. accent, indicating tbe quantity, §. 13. accents, division of, §. 1. 3. dya/iai, dydaofxai, §. 52. 2. e. dyav, with comp. §. 63. 1. k. dyrj, §. 62. 2. e. dyrj, §. 62. 2. e. 'AyrjcriXaog, §. 55. 1. d. 'Ayic, §. 62. 2. d. dyopaiog, §. 6. 5. d. -ayog, gen. from. nom. a%, §. 43. 4. 5. -ayog, -ayeoj, -aytrtg, deriv. of ayu), §. 55. 2. c. dyvpig, with deriv. §. 60. 1. e. note. -adrjg, -adog, deriv. 56. 1. a. -adtov, dimin. §. 56. 1. h. note 2. -adov, -adijv, -adiog, deriv. §. 56. 1. b. -adog, gen. from nom. ag, §. 43. 7. dfivrov, §. 60. 1. n. del, init. syll. of, in comp. §. 62. 1. a. -aevg, derivatives, §. 55. 1. b. -a£a>, verbs, penult, of deriv. tenses of, §. 51. 1. e. — deriv. of, §. 56. 1. k. drjp, with its deriv. and comp. §. 62. 1. c. and note. -arjg, deriv. adj. from verbs in a, verbs, §. 50. 10. ~aia, nom. of 1 decl. §. 16. 2. §. 17- 1. Alag, §. 6. 5. d. aiKri, §. 62. 1. d. -dltcog, derivatives, §. 55. 1. b. aipivXiog, §. 60. 1. d. -ate, derivatives, §. 55. 1. b. A'Lvapog, §. 55. 2. h. aiavrjrrjp, §. 59. 1. Aiffvrjrrjg, §. 59. 1. Aiavfir], §. 59. 2. i. -aioj, f. airw, verbs, §. 52. 1 note 3. -atciov, -aKia, -aKi%u), deriv. §. 55. 2. b. -aiciov, dimin. §. 56. 1. h. note 2. "Akic, §. 62. 2. e. 172 INDEX. dtcfirj, §. 7. 4. -ctKovra, numerals, §. 44. 2. -atcog, gen. from nom. a£, §. 43. 4. 5. -afac, -a/ac, deriv. §. 56. 1. d. -aKocrtoi, ai, a, numerals, §. 44. 2. dicpdavrog, §. 55. 1. a. aicojv, §. 62. 2. c. dXaoc, §. 62. 1. b. note. -a\£0£, -aXrj, -a\ov, -aXiSrjg, -aXog, derivatives, §. 56. 1. e. dXsrpifiavog, §. 64. 2. h. note 2. -aXig, diminutives, §. 56. 1. h. note 2. -aXog, dissyllables, §. 62. ] . a. and note. dXvrov, §. 60. 1. n. 'AX, §. 50. 4. note. -ag, nom. of 1 and 3 decl. §. 28. 1. 2. 3. accus. pi. of 1 and 3 decl. §. 28. 4. 5. of pronouns, §. 28. 5. note 4. adverbs, §. 28. 6. 2 sing, of verbs, §. 29. -a §, 6. 5. d. did, §. 10. c. compounds of, §. 65. c. diocKOvog, §. 55. 2. h. diafieXe'iffri, §. 11. 1. diarpi(3rj, §. 64. 2. h. note 2. dij3a[xog. §. 55. 2. g. didvfj,droKog, §. 55. 2. h. digamma, §. 5. 3. di%vyrjg, §. 60. 1. n. d&vpanfiog, §. 65. c. note. ACiirsreog, §. 11. 3. diKT}, with deriv. and comp. §. 64. 2. i. note 2. ^ij/j?, with deriv. §. 57. 2. d. Aioyevrjg, §. 10. b. Aioipaveog, §. 11. 3. ftft §• 37. compounds of, §. 65. c. AicpiXog, §. 64. 2. m. fyi, £v, dp, syll. remain short before, §.7.3.5. dpa7r£Tr)g, §. 62. 2. e. dpdip, dpcnrog, §. 43. 3. dpifxvg, §. 64. 2. c. dpvlvog, §. 66. c. note 1. dpvog, §. 10. c. §.47. 6. ^piroxog, §• 67. 1. a. Av[iaia, §. 66. 2. d. note. dvvafikvow, §. 10. b. dvg , compounds, §. 67. 1. c. dvaw paying, §. 63. La. note 1. E. -ea, nom. of 1 decl. §. 16. 3. -tia, nom. of 1 decl. §. 16. 4. §. nacre, §. 52. e. note 1. tiXvog, §. 59. 1. tiXvtpd^o), ii\v£, derivatives, §. 58. 2. b. "Icfy, with deriv. §. 64. 2. n. -idrjg, derivatives, §. 58. 2 a. -idiov, diminutives, §. 58. 2. c. and note. -i£iO£, a, ov, deriv. §. 58. 2. c. note. -'&>£> gen. from nom. ig, §. 45. 3. b. 4. INDEX. 175 -i^o), verbs, deriv. tenses of, §. 51. 1. e. 'irjfxi, with compounds, §. 52. 2. d. 'IrjTTvyu)j^, 'Ir]7rvy ii]v, §. 59. 2. a. note. -ir\rr\g, -irjrig, derivatives, §. 57- 2. i. note 1. i'3-i, §. 52. 2. c. -tS'oc, gen. from nom. ig, §. 45. 3. a. iSv7rriu)va, §. 57- 1. b. note 2. iSvg, §. 64. 2. 1. iicdv(o, §. 51. 2. note 1. LKtaidu)v, §. 10. b. -iKog, gen. from. nom. i£, §. 45. 1. derivatives, §. 57. 2. a. §. 58. 2. d. t'Xaoc, §. G2. 1. b. note. iXjj, §. 64. 2. b. note. -iXog, derivatives, §. 57- 2. b. and note, §. 58. 2. e. dissyh. with their derivatives, §. 64. 2. b. IXvog, §. 47- 6. iXvog, §. 59. 1. i\vc, §. 64. 2. 1. -ijuoc, derivatives, §. 58. 2. e. and note. dissyllables, §. 64. 2. c. Ifxaaao), §. 65. e. -w, accus. of 3 decl. §. 33. 2. — paragog. dat. pi. of 1 decl. §. 33. 1. — dat. pi. of pers. pron. §. 34. — Att. append, to pron. §. 34. — adverbs, §. 35. 1. — 3 pers. of verbs. §. 35. 2. -iva, derivatives, §. 57- 2. c. -ivtog, -ivog, derivatives, §. 58. 2. f. and note. -ivr\, derivatives, §. 57. 2. d. and note. -ivrjg, derivatives, §. 57. 2. d. and note. §. 58. 2. h. -ivog, gen. from. nom. ig or iv, §. 45. 3. a. -ivog, -iviag, derivatives, §. 57. 2. e. -ivog, dissyllables, §. 64. 2. d. -ivoj, -ivsoj, verbs, §. 51. 3. and a. iov, with deriv. §. 64. 1. a. note. -10c, gen. from nom. tg, §. 45. 4. iof, with deriv. §. 64. 1. a. and note. -wg, dissyll. with their derivatives, §. 64. 1. a. b. -i7roc, gen. from nom. np, §. 45, 5. 6. 'l7r7TOjuio\ov, §. 11. 2. . tpevc, &c. §. 64. 2. m. -ipig, derivatives, §. 57- 2. f. -ig, nom. sing, of 3 decl. §. 36. I. 2. — contr. nom. and ace. pi. of 3 decl. §. 36. 1. d. — adverbs, §. 37- -«ra, dissyllables, §. 64. 2. d. -icic, derivatives, §. 58. 2. h. -laog, -laig, -iviadrjg, derivatives, §. 57- 2.g. -leva), -ittcj, f. aw, verbs, §. 51. 1. f. icTTaai, §. 53. 1. 'iraXia, §. 10. b. irea, §. 65. b. note. -iTt], derivatives, §. 57- 2. h. -irrjg, -trie, derivatives, §. 57- 2. 1. -iTov, 'irog, derivatives, §. 58. 2. h. -irog, gen. from nom. 1, §. 45. 1. -irog, derivatives, §. 56. k. itvq, §. 65. b. "Itwv, 'lT(t)vig, §. 65. b. note. -i(pog, gen. from nom. «//, §. 45. 6. _t X°£> g en - from nom. i£, §. 45. 1. 2. derivatives, §. 58. 2. i. -tw, verbs, §. 52. 2. fut. and deriv. tenses of, §. 52. 2. -iwv, comparatives, §. 46. -ni)v, -mvwg, -iovidr}g, derivatives, §. 57. 1. a. b. -iwv, primitives with their deriv. §. 64. 1. c. -i(ovr], derivatives, §. 57- 1. a. note. K, KClKOV, §. 9. f. Kafi7rv\6sig, §. 60. 1. d. KapaSoKelv, §. 55. 2. g. Kapog, §. 62. 2. a. Kara, §. 9. a. with compounds, §. 63. 1. k. KaraSifxcvai, §. 53. 6. note. icaravsvcov, §. 11. 1. Karapiyri\d, §. 11. 1. Kcio), §. 52. 1. note 4. KSKpv(pa\og, s §. 59. 2. i. KeXvcpog, §. 59. 2. i. icepdara, §. 43. 7- note. Keparofiog, §. 55. 2. g. Ksp/cwpec, $. 47. 5. KsxvKa, Ksxvfxai, §. 52. 7- note. KiKvg, with deriv. §. 64. 2. n. Kivvprjg, §. 60. 1. i. Kidc, §. 45. 3. b...note 3. Kig, §. 36. 1. c. Kixdvoj, §. 51. 2. note 1. Koioio, §. 6. 5. a. k\, Kp, syll. remain short before, §. 7, 3. fcXaw (I weep), §. 52. 1. note 4. tcXifxa, §. 64. 2. c. kXivt), §. 57. 2. d. KpedvojAog, §. 55. 2. g. Kpdarog, §. 43. 8. a. §. 62. 1. d. KpdZ,a>, §. 51. 1. a. Kpdviov, §. 62. 2. e. Kpdvov, with deriv. and comp. §. 55. 2. h. §. 62. 2. e. crasis, §. 6. 5. d. note 4. Kparog, §. 43. 8. a. feci, §. 31. 2. KpiSr), with deriv. §. 64. 2. n. Kpifxa, §. 64. 2. c. fcpidc, with deriv. §. 64. 1. and note. Kpirrjg, with deriv. §. 57- 2. i. note 2. KpojX[xv(t)v, §. 59. 1. note 2. Kpv, §. 33. 2. note 1. \iv, syll. remain short before, §.7-5. IxvioiGi, §. 58. 1. a. note 2. /*u£oe, §. 66. 2. m. /.luo/croVoe, §. 67. 1. a. Mvpw, §.66. 2. k. juvc, compounds of, §. 67- 1. a. Mwcroc, §. 66. 2. n. fivdjv, §. 66. 1. a. N. v, short syll. lengthened before, §. 9. a. -va, nom. of 1 decl. §. 16. 11. note 3. 4. vaog, with deriv. and comp. §. 62. 1. b. nature, length or shortness by, §. 3. 1. vowels always long by, §. 3. 2. short by, §. 3. 2. — — syllables long by, §. 4. 1. 2. 3. vsaviag, vsavig, §. 55. 2. h. vrji, §. 6. 5. d. viKtj, deriv. and comp. of, §. 64. 2. i. viv, §. 33. 2. note 1. viaofxai, §. 51. 1. f. VKpadtg, vi, verbs, §. 52. 1. c. pku>, derivatives of, §. 52. 7- note. pnrrj, with deriv. §. 64. 2. n. pvSfxoq, §. 7. 4. c, short syll. lengthened before, §. 9. 1. -era, nom. of I decl. §. 17. 11. 2apa7ric, §. 62. 2. e. St/upa/ac, §. 57. 2. e. 2epi, §. 52. 1. d. ^icipojv, §. 57. 2. f. -ox, 3 pers. of verbs, §. 32. (Tiaycjv, §. 55. 2. c. 2i>wv, §. 64. 2. c. -ow, paragog. dat. pi. §. 33. 1. (Tiroc, with deriv. §. 64. 2. f. cpAXrj, (TfuXa, §. 64. 2. b. note. o-Tra^l, §. 62. 2. e. ^rpvfiojv, §. 66. 2. n. orvXoc, §. 66. 2. b. note. av, §. 38. 4. avfiuTrjg, §. 67. 1. a. o"u£wyia, §. 60. 1. n. gvkov, with deriv. §. 66. 2. n. note 1 . syllables, lengthening of, at the end of words, §. 9. „ i n tb. e begin- ning of words, §.10. in the middle of words, §. 11. ovv, §. 41. 4. compounds of, §. 67- 1. d. cw£%£c, §. 10. c. §. 67- 1. d. note. Synizesis, §. 6. 5. d. note 3. Swoia, §. 66. 2. k. 2upd/cocrai, §. 55. 2. h. and note. (TvptyE,, §. 66. 2. n. avg, compounds of, §. 67. 1. a. G(paSa%w, §. 51. 1. a. o- 2. 1. Tujiwe-ye, Tvipuv, §. 66. 2. 1. i> final in decl. §. 38. in names of letters, §. 38. 1 . in neut. nom. of 3 decl. §. 38. 2. - — - in voc. of 3 decl. §. 38. 3. in adverbs, §.39. I. in 3 pers. of verbs in vfii, § 39. 2. v in penult, and antepenult, syll. of decl. §. 47. — in penult, of aor. 2. and fut. 2. §. 50. 3. — in penult, of perf. 1 . and 2. § . 50. 5. 6. 7- N 178 INDEX, v in penult, and middle syll. of deriva- tives, §. 59. §. 60. — for o, §. 60. 1. e. note. — in deriv. or comp. from short roots, §. 60. 1. n. — in initial syll. of words, §. 66. §. 67- — before a vowel, §. 66. 1. a. §. 67. 2. a. of dissyll. neut. in og, with their deriv. §. 66. 2. i. of dissyll. barytones, with deriv. §. 66. 2. 1. 2. m. of verbs pure, §. 66. of verbs in crew, with deriv. §. 67- 2. b. of derivatives of aor. 2. 16. 8. §. 67. 2. c. -va, nom. of 1 decl. vpog, §. 66. 2. n. -vyi], -vywv, derivatives, §. 59. 2. a. -vyrj, dissyllables, §. 66. 1. d. -vyog, gen. from. nom. v%, §. 47- 4. b. c. vdari, §. 9. a. -vhov, diminutives, §. 59. 2. b. -vdov, adverbs, §. 59. 2. b. -vdog, gen. from nom. vg, §. 47. 6. vsrog, §. 66. 1. b. note. -u£u>, verbs, derivative tenses of, §. 51. 1. e. -v$ri, 2 sing, imperat. of verbs in v/ii, §. 53. 3. -vS, verbs, §. 50. 10. -via, nom. of 1 decl. §. 16. 9. §. 17- 5. vlog, §. 6. 5. a. -vKog, gen. from. nom. u£, §. 47. 3. 4. a. derivatives, §. 60. 1. a. vXaKOfjiojpoi, §. 10. b. -vXrj, derivatives, §. 60. 1. b. vXrj, with deriv. §. 66. 2. b. note. -vXig, derivatives, §. 60. 1. c. -vXov, dissyll. neut. with deriv. §. 66. 2. b. -vXog, derivatives, §. 60. 1. d. dissyllables, §. 66. 2. c. -vfia, dissyll. and trisyll. with deriv. §. 66. 2. e. vfiug, §. 66. 2. n. -vfiat, -v/jiev, -vfisvai, -v\ir\v, -vyLtBa, -vfi&ov, pers. of verbs in v/xi, §. 53. 1. 2. 3. b. 5. 7- -vjit], dissyllables, with deriv. §. 66. 2. d. -vjii, verbs, §. 53. v/xiv, &c. §. 34. v\i\ii, Vfifiiv, §. 34. -vfiog, -vficov, -vfxia, derivatives, §. 60. 1. a. and note. ■vfiog, dissyll. with deriv. §. 66. 2. f. -w, nom. of 3 decl. §. 40. 1. — neut. particip. of verbs in vfii, §. 40.2. — accus. of 3 decl. §. 43. 3. 4. — 1 and 3 pens, of verbs in vfii, §. 41.3. -vvai, infin. of verbs in vfii, §. 53. 4. -vvi\, derivatives, §. 59. 2. c. §. 60. 1. f. -vvrj, dissyllables, §. 66. 2, g. -vvog, gen. from nom. vv or vg, §. 47- 2. -vvog, -vvia, -wig, derivatives, §. 59. 2. c. d. §. 60. 1. g. -vvio, -vveoj, verbs, §. 51. 4. and a. vocative, short syll. lengthened in the termination of, §. 9. e. -vog, gen. from nom. v, §. 47- L from nom. vg, §. 47. 6. 'Y7Ttor]air]v, §. 12. 1. vTrohlii], §. 12. 1. Ivypodiastole, §. 1. 6. -virog, gen. from nom. vip, §. 47- 7- hyphen, §. 1. 6. -vp, nom. of substantives, §. 42. 1. -vpa, derivatives, §. 59. 2. e. -vpov, derivatives, §. 60. 1. h. note. -vpog, gen. from nom. vp, §. 47- 5. -vpog, -vpiog, derivatives, §. 60. 1. h. i. -vpog, dissyllables, §. 66. 2. k. -vpu>, -vpno, verbs, §. 51. 4. and note. -vg, nom. of 3 decl. §. 40. 3. 4. part, of verbs in vjjli, §. 40. 3. e. — - contr. nom. and ace. pi. §. 40. 3. f. — adverbs, §. 41. 1. 2 sing, of verbs in vfii, §. 41. 2. vg, compounds of, §. 67- 1. a. -vera, fern. part, of verbs in v\xi, §. 53. 1. -vaai, -vaav, -v/u, §. 53. 1. 2. 3. 5. -vrtpog, -vrarog, comparatives and su- perlatives, §. 48. -vrrjg, -vrig, derivatives, §. 59. 2. g. §. 60. 1. 1. -VTog, derivatives, §. 59. 2. h. ixpopfiog, §. 67. 1. a. -v(pog, -vQeog, derivatives, §. 60. 1. m. - V X°G> S en - fr° m nom. vl, §. 47- 4. b. c. -vxog, -vxov, -v\ia, -v\iog, derivatives, §. 60. 1. m. -vu>, verbs, §. 52. 4. 5. 6. 7- fut. and aor. 1. of, §. 52. 4. c. d. 5. 6. perf. and derivative tenses of, §. 52. 4. e. 5. 6. -viov, derivatives, §. 59. 1. note 3. $. (b, short syll. lengthened before, §. 9. g. note 1. — 6g, where the iEolic had ]3oXXa, fiw/moQ, aofyog. That the accentuation upon the last syllable in the later dialects originated in an abandonment of the etymological meaning of a word, to be explained only by the given relation of the later dialects to the iEolic, or of the Roman languages to the Latin, is proved above all by the remarkable fact, that the Greeks almost inva- riably accent all words of barbarous (i. e. un-Greek) termina- tions upon the last syllable. Thus 'Aoymx (Herod. 2. 30.), OvporaX (Herodot. 3. 8.), NijtSr, 'A/3paa^, MeXx^e^k, MixariX, Aaj3tS, 'AXtXar, MuvS, Qa/jLvZ. Here one cannot but perceive an endeavour to bring the last barbarously terminating syllable as clearly as possible before the ear of the hearer, that the word 10 GREEK ACCENTUATION. whose etymology was unknown to the Greeks, might appear to them at once as barbarous. Note. — The law of oxytoning (§. 11.) all words not of Greek termination (V. Aristot. poet. c. 21.) is sometimes neglected in the MSS. and editions. But it is sufficiently founded upon the nature of the thing, and is so general, that even in Plut. Num. 9. the Latin pontem is accented Trovrifx, contrary to the Latin accentuation, which is exactly like that of the iEolians. PART I. Of the Accent of Individual Words. §. 10. The whole doctrine of the accentuation of individual words, as parts of speech, will rest principally upon the establishment of laws, by which the accentuation in the later dialects, par- ticularly the Attic, deviates from those general laws that suffice for determining the position of the accent according to the iEolic usage. But before these laws can themselves be given, the following designations must be attended to. §. ii. I. A word, which has the accent on the last syllable, is called 6 %vrovov, oxytone, e. g. KaXog, ayaSog ; a word, which has it on the penultimate, is called irapo^vrovov, paroxytone, e. g. Xoyog, wapShog, oXiyog ; and that which has it on the antepenultimate, Trpoirapo^vTovov, propar oxytone^ e. g. cr£J3a(Tfiiog, fXELXi^iog. II. From the contraction of two vowels, whether simple or double, the first of which had the acute and therefore the second the gravis (§. 2.), arises the designation of such blended syl- lables by the circumflex, first ( A ) (as the acute and gravis com- bined), then ("). As it must not be forgotten that the contracted syllable is formed of two, of which the first had the acute, it follows that such a circumflex can never stand on the third syllable from the end, or even on the second if the last syllable be long, because otherwise, by resolving the contracted syllable GREEK ACCENTUATION. 11 and the last long one each into two, the acute would come upon the fourth syllable from the end. In such cases the acute is always found instead of the circumflex. A word which has the circumflex on the last syllable is called TTEpHnrwjuiEvov, perispome, e. g. (j)i\w (from (j>i\iu) , ap7raZo) (pro- perly apiraZo), which the length of the final syllable does not allow, §. 5.). Hence it is evident, that in those tenses and modes in which the changed quantity of the final syllable per- mits, the fundamental idea of the verb again receives the accent, thus e. g. rjp7ra£ov and apwaZz, because the final syllable is now short. §. 13. 1. Prepositions, augment and reduplication, as also every com- position, enlarge the idea of a simple verb. The accent, there- fore, in these cases is either placed upon the syllable itself, which enlarges the idea, or if this be not permitted by the quan- tity of the final syllable or the number of all the syllables, as near 14 GREEK ACCENTUATION. as possible to the syllable which enlarges the idea. Comp. §. 4. 5. Note 1. — e. g. 'E7rtX£7£ (imperat. of eiriXiyu)), tXsyov, k(- KavSs, KdTBpvKave; liriXzye is different from the simple Xiys; therefore, when the nature of the final syllable permits, this preposition receives the accent, which in kiriXiya) is not pos- sible. The Romans in this resemble the Greeks : disco, di- dici, tango, tetigi. Note 2. — 'Expyv has no augment, but merely a prefix of £ for the sake of euphony (as in e\^ig and x^c) > otherwise it must have been %x9^ v i and even then there would have been no reason for the paragogic v ; £\priv is an old infinitive, used as an adverb. V. Theodos. p. 218. So to \9^ v * n Eurip. Conf. Eustath. ad Iliad, p. 1179. 38. "Expr? stands in Apol- lonius for kxpw^^W^- There is here therefore no anomaly of tone. 2. It is evident, that in compounds the added word, which enlarges the idea of the simple verb, does not carry its accent beyond the syllable, which possessed it before the composition. Consequently o^e? liriax^ ; not £7rt(7X£C ; $6q, airoSog ; not airoSog. Also not Karav^s, Trapaax*) but Karacr^Q) TraoaayzQ > or at the most, kcltcktxe, irapaayt, as Hesiod. Sc. H. 446., £7ricrx £ > unless here Ittkjx*i from lir'tax?), be more correct. Note. — A recession of the accent to the otherwise unac- cented first syllable of a compound occurs in other words, namely, in substantives when the second word has suf- fered syncope : Qioyvig (for Qeoyovig), eirnrXa (for kiriirXoa), XsijULappoQ, Qioickog, 'EteokAoc, Aopu/cXoc. The adjectives in such a case retain the old tone ; Ka/covoot, kcikovoi, &c. Hence the accentuation of veoyvog, from veoyovog, instead of veoyvog, is remarkable. On tcaracrxs see Jacobs ad Achill. Tat. p. 729. Matthise, Eur. Tr. 82. 3. Lastly, it must be observed, as has already been laid down §. 4. Note, that the accent is never placed beyond the first com- position, and, therefore, never beyond an existing augment. Hence Kari^xov, irapiaxov, kiriairov, lirijdav, afi^iarav, even in the doubly augmented forms, lavviJKe, y)viax ov - ^ n raw&nrc and the like, however, there is no double augment. It is evident, 12 GREEK ACCENTUATION. 15 therefore, that as soon as the augment is dropped the accent passes to the composition : avvotda, irtpioiSa ; for olda is without augment. In like manner in the Epic forms airE^E, Karens (not Kari X £ Horn. II. III. 243. Od. XIII. 269.) uveXke (not dvAicev Horn. II. XIII. 583., but as vcj>e\ke II. XIV. 477.). So 7repi X eve (Od. VII. 140., but not tteqix^v, as 0°^. III. 437. ; for here is no contraction). Besides viroul^a, vttoelkov, ettie arm with rejected augment. Conf. Schol. Venet. II. XVI. 305. VI. 244. Eustath. ad II. p. 1084. 28. /isS'iev Od. XXI. 377. ought to be h&iev. Note. — The Grammarians appear to have retained a dis- tinction in composition between aSov (imperf.) and VSov (aor. 2.) : egeTSov and ecjiSov. So still in Soph. Phil. 679. kaidov, although in Horn. II. XVIII. 233. we have eiviSe, and XX. 342. e&Sev. Buttmann, however, in Sophocles, silently cor- rects into t aiSov, which at least is supported by the analogy of avvoida. a. The same is the case with verbs, which in prose usually put the augment before the preposition : e. g. KaSiZov (not Ka&- tZov ; for it is tKaS^ov), icaSevde (not kci§ev$e ; for it is ekciSev- Sov), Ka^rjTo (not KadiJTo ; for it is licaSriro). On the contrary, it is correct to accentuate, /caS^oro (for there is no ekcl^yjcfto), ztpl- Zov, evev^ov, and iraplZov. This is the accentuation to be fol- lowed even in Homer, to whom the forms ekcl^l^ov and ekciSyito are not unknown. For although the former (Od. XVI. 408.) can be removed, yet the latter remains as sufficiently old. Hymn, in Bacch. That forms like /ca^rjpsv, fiEyr\gav, &c. present nothing remark- able or appertaining to this place, is evident, although the Schol. Venet. II. XIV. 171. unnecessarily makes express mention that these forms must be prop aroxy tone. b. Monosyllabic verbal forms by nature long and without a connective vowel, take the circumflex, (particularly if the aug- ment be omitted) : orij (sorrj), %rj (e^y}), fir) (Kj3»?), yvCo (f'yi/w). On the contrary, the short plural forms (pSav, ayov, eXiyov, irpi^ov, laraaav, l(pde\ov is a participle, not an indicative, as is usually supposed. This can only be w^eXov. b. Composition, and therefore an enlargement of the sense, has no influence upon a change of the accent in any oxytone parti- ciple, but the syllable accented in the nominative retains the tone through all the cases : SoKriSttg, SoKiftivTog, $0Kr)5(vTa. Note. — aiicwv cannot be considered as a participle. On EMXSuv see §. 15. 2. b. Eustath. ad. II. p. 1097. 63. c. The genitive plur. of the fern, participle is perispome (see §. 19. first decl. 2.), only when the nominative of the feminine has a syllable more than that of the masculine ; e. g. ra^f ig, ra^- Seiaa (rax^acrwv). Comp. §. 28. 2. Otherwise the genitives of the masculine and feminine are accented alike, tyaivofxzvog, (pai- vofiivr] (gen. pi. (fratvofjiivwv). GREEK ACCENTUATION. 17 Note 1. — Only Doric genitives in av are always perispome even in these latter forms of the second declension : aivo- fiEvav. This likewise holds of all adjectives. Note 2. — Proper names formed from participles in ofiEvog and ajuLEvog are mostly oxytone : SwSojusvoc? 'Op^ojUEvoc, 'Akeo-- crafiEvoQ, TdtrajuevoC) 'la/uLEvog, 'A/covyUfvoc, A£?ajii£voc, KXa?OjU£- vai, 'AXaXicofiEvai, EvpvjULevai, 'ISojuevcu. Hereto belong also the substantives ^E^a/uEvr], ela/mevri, §. 23. c. 1. Some trisyllabic pro- per names of this kind, however, are proparoxytone, and follow the general rule : "Opjuevoe, KXvfievog. Generally grammarians appear to have invented this distinction in the accentuation of proper names, as it is manifestly in direct contradiction to what has been said above, §. 7., on the subject of proper names, in so far as they have retained the old ^Eolic accentua- tion. See Lobeck ad Phryn. p. 322. Peculiarity of Tenses. §• 15- 1. Perfect. — a. The termination of the perf. act. infinitive in m has been formed by syncope, XeAoi7r£vat from XEXonrEfiEvciL ; hence it is paroxytone, contrary to §. 12. The same may, from the accentuation, be inferred of the perf. pass, infinitive TErixpSai, KaSrivSai, Kar^av^ai, IttikuvScil, (see §. 11. II. 1. Note). Yet the perf. pass, belongs properly to §. 16. II. 2. Note. — In a similar manner the accentuation of the old in- finitive in Efiev is to be explained by apocope, thus Xeittejulev, contrary to the rule, §. 12., is a paroxytone, because it is apo- copised from XELirE/uLEvat. So ek^v/xev, Zevjvviuev, &c. b. The termination of the particip. perf. act. is oxytone. Comp. §. 28. TETV(j>WQ 3 TETVCpvta, TETV(f)6g. c. The particip. perf. pass, is always paroxytone, ^because it has been formed by syncope, omitting the connective vowel, te- rvfifiEvoQ, ttettwiievoq. It belongs however on that account to §. 16. II. 3. Note 1. — Some participles (mostly with the Attic reduplica- tion) disregard this syncope, and are accented according to the general principles. So aXcLX^fXEvog, aicaxvfJLtvog, £X?]Xa/z£voc, EacTvfiEvog, acrjufvoc, apfiEvog. Among these Herodian reckons C 18 GREEK ACCENTUATION. also (Etym. M. s. v.) ovrafievog, and Eust. ad Odyss. p. 1838. 15. api? jucvoc. The first three, together with ovra/uLevog and KTa/iievoQ, are perhaps rather to be considered as presents of verbs in jm, (V. Phavor. v. 'Akciy/j^voc.) Finally, the par- ticiple eXi]XafiEvoQ occurs in the MSS. themselves mostly as paroxytone. Conf. Herod. VII. 84. "R/msvog, KaSfifisvog is always proparoxytone, because this original perfect has passed into the signification of the present. Note 2, — Apollonius (de adv. p. 545.) gives the rule, that this recession of accent always takes place when a is omitted before jmevog, ovracrfiivog, oura/x£vo£, GvvsXiiXacFfiivog, crvvzXri- Xd/uLEvog. The same he supposes of Secnrocrrrig and SscnroTrig, Epyaay£ to the Attics (Bekker. Anecd. p. 1428). Apollonius appeal's to have oxytoned d§i also as imperative of the aor. 2. (Theocrit. Id. 22. 56.), while as pres. Herodian makes it paroxytone, or rather properispome, Draco, p. 58. "iSf and Xa/3£, when used in an emphatic sense, are paroxytone. ^Esch. Eum. 127. Xa/3e, Xaj3f, Xaj3£, Xaj3f, pdZov. GREEK ACCENTUATION. 19 The imperative mid. belongs hereto, yet so that the last syllable is perispome: ysvov, 7rvSov, (3a\ov, Idov. The last, when having the force of an interjection, becomes oxytone, according to the analogy of lov, which was also lov. It is peri- spome when it denotes the actual contemplation of an object. Hence, l$ov, rt tart, and wg ypatyevg cnroarra^dg Idov fxs Kava- Spriarov Eur. Hec. 802. The aor. 2. imperat. mid. is also perispome in all compounds, the accent never receding, kcitiSov, £$^ou, 7rapafia\ov (Arist. Ran. 180.), KaSeXov (Arist. Vesp. 936.), while compounds of the imperat. act. fall again under the old rule : Aaj3l v7roXaj3f, iX&e f ^eX^e, zliri cnroznre. Note, — The imperat. aor. 2. mid. does not appear to have been accented on the last syllable in all dialects, Conf. Schol. Aristoph. Plut. 103. to £e ttvSov iregtcnraTaC sort yap Ssv- Tepog dopiGTog' tovtov <$£ ot 'Arrt/cot ttzqigttCxji /cat y) yjyr\)Ko\ov$r}(j£ Ty StaXt/crti)* 17 yap avaXoyia fiapvvet, wg iicov in Aristoph. Eq. 590. Soph. O. C. 470. has hsyicov, and 147. t/cou, which Elmsley has changed into eveyKov and t/cov. II. In the infinitive. Here the accented syllable invariably takes the circumflex: tt&uv, uttuv, dyaytiv, ttettl^uv, Siyuv, v(*)v and KaTairtyvwv (as Aristarchus accented, while Tyrannio on the contrary made them oxytone; see Schol. Venet. II. XVI. 827.), as they are manifestly aorists, there is much room for doubt. Note 2. — 'Iwv, Kiwv, swv, agreeably to all analogy, ought to be accented twv, kUov, eojv, as properly aorists of this kind could not be formed. Nevertheless tradition and the analogy of TTiMv are followed. Note 3. — The old proper names "Iwv, 'A/x^iwv, 'Yirtpiojv, Aa/uLwv, form an exception, according to §. 7., as they have only v for the characteristic, and not vr, like the aorist participles. Likewise EvASwv, as a proper name, belongs in its accentuation hereto. Conf. Herodot. IV. 162. Note 4. — The accentuations v and ux&uv, instead of o-y^wv and G\e^dv, ought no longer to be tolerated in Attic authors, because ia^^ov is only aor. 2. and never imperf. In like manner Sfywv and Siystv are false for ^ywv and Siyuv. V. Elmsl. ad Med. p. 234. On the contrary, Blomf. ad Prom. 16. IV. In the indicative, conjunctive, and optative, the aorists II. are always accented according to the general rule, eXafiov, Xaj3w, XafioifjiL, not Xaj3w, Saicw, &c. for there is no contraction in these aorists. Likewise in the compounds with e^w no contraction is to be thought of, <7%w, ri). Kara^x^ would ii ot be an aorist, there being none of this form from verbs pure in £, but the present of a verb pure KciTa, dSu) (d<$£ is the root, whence sl^icj, slSw *, and d&ujv), and in the passive r&wfiai, larufiai, di^w^ai; see Theodos. Bekk. p. 1058. Note, — In the conjunctive and optative of trjjut this law is often found violated in the MSS. ; a^ioj for d(j>i(o, and a^twjuev for dcpLwfiev, i|iwju£v for t^icofiev; but this thoroughly anomalous accentuation has arisen solely by confounding these forms with the conjunctive of elfii, iw, 'Iio/ulev ; see, however, Butt- mann, Ausf. Gr. Gr. §. 108. I. 3. on Soph. Phil. 705. Bekker, Theogn. 94. When Matthias (Eurip. Heracl. 475.) holds accentuations such as ttq6(j§i)tz to be analogous to KardSriTai and the like, he at least does so in opposition to the opinion of the old grammarians. 1 According to Aristarchus, eidw is the common accentuation; yet ei8(o, ddijg, appears also to have heen in use, which for Homer, who recognises the shortened conjunctive 'Iva fi^o/xev, is perhaps to he preferred. V. Schol. Venet. II. I. 363. VI. 150. GREEK ACCENTUATION. 23 But in the passive forms the Attics often reject the character- istic vowel, and replace it by the connective vowel, so that the accentuation now conforms to that of the regular verbs, ASufxai, SiSufxai, 'iGTiojuai. The conjunctives Svvtofiat and cTriaTajfxai, together with all whose active is not in use, are accented only in this manner, but the rest take both accentuations, yet so that the Attics mostly prefer that which pre-supposes the omission of the characteristic vowel. This obtains even of iotcdjlmu *. When grammarians transfer this accentuation to "vfJ-h it ought, from the nature of the thing, to be confined to forms of the pre- sent pass, and mid., where I is in the root, e. g. as if we were to say Trpo'iio/uLai; on the contrary, the aorist 2. ought always to be properispome, 7rpoo5jucu, 7rpofjrat, not 7rpow/zcu, 7rpoi]Tcu, V. Phav. p. 1397. 57. It would, indeed, be repugnant to sound reason to reject the whole root of a word (consequently its sense, its signification, in short, the predicate in the judgment, §. 12.), and to leave it to be represented by a connective vowel. Such an inconsistency would be exhibited by irpodyfiai, TrporjTai, &c. wherein the preposition irpo appears formally inflected as a verb : 7rpo root, w and r\ connective vowel of the conjunctive, and rai termination. In rt^wjucu, nay even in afjiai a remnant of the root is preserved in $ and i ; but in a$v\rai there would be only a breathing of the root. And who has ever heard of a breathing without a vowel belonging to it ? Therefore such forms, especially as the MSS. are so often favourable (V. Thucyd. I. 64. Bekkeri), should invariably be properispome. Comp. Phavorin. v. 'AwoSwfiai Elmsl. Heracl. 476. Note. — In Plato de legg. XI. p. 934. c. even the conjunc- tive liriGTiovTai from £7rio-ra/xai occurs as properispome. 3. The optative of these verbs has the peculiarity of inserting an r\ between the termination and modal characteristic (t); hence T&dr)v ($£ root, i modal characteristic, tj the inserted 1 It is usually assumed, that l(rru)[xai alone must always be properispome. For this I find no express testimony in grammarians. On the other hand, there is no internal reason, why, like riS-w/uai, KEpwvTai (Homer, II. IV. 260.), we should not also accent 'iorcjfiai, as the MSS. so often give this accentuation. V. Poppo. proleg. ad Thuc. I. p. 229. Herodot. VI. 59. 24 GREEK ACCENTUATION. vowel, v termination). This rj occurs now only in the active forms, where therefore the accentuation t&eTtov, t&eTiaev, t&e1tz 7 igtcutov, tarratjuev, lgtcute, StSotrov, ^i^ol/jlev, StSoTrc, is to be ex- plained as a syncope from tl^el^tov, tl^elthxev, &c. V. Eustath. ad Odyss. p. 1907. 46. But the accentuation of the third person plural tiSeIe v, icjtolev, SidoUv, is remarkable ; for here that vowel is really extant, only shortened as c, between the modal character- istic and termination. For this intermediate vowel also appears as c in the active forms of the common conjugation of the optative 1. in the natural length of oi (e. g. Xtfiroi from Xelwole, see the note on Aristotle's Polit. p. 333.) and of al (e. g. rvxfjal from rv- \paiz) for the accent; 2. as really visible in the third person plur. (keiwoi ev) and in the third person sing, of the Attic forms in e ie, (e. g. rvipEiE). Consequently the third person plur. ought pro- perly to be accented tiSeiev, 'igtciiev, SlSoiev. But in earlier times this r? or e must also have been used in the passive forms ; at least the a in the Ionic forms of the third person plur. j3ouAoi- a-ro, yEvaai-a-To, tends to shew this. The omission of such an originally extant intermediate vowel can alone explain the ac- centuations tiSeIo, tiSeIto, t&eXctSe, t&eIvto, larato, lgtcuto, &- Solo, SiSoIto, &c. (V. Arcad. p. 171. 27.) But besides this regular accentuation the Attics have also forms, which no longer recognize the previous existence of an intermediate vowel, consequently draw the accent as far back as possible. This accentuation is confined solely to those forms, the active present of which is no longer extant : Svvairo, Ewicr- raiTO) ovotrOf &c. are never found as properispome. V. Arcad. p. 172. ; on the contrary in tora/xcu the accentuation 'lavaio, la- raiTo, which no longer regards the intermediate vowel, is peculiar to the Attics alone. Note 1. — The Homeric forms of the optative XeXvto and Saivvro are according to the above rule correctly properispome. V. Schol. Venet. II. XXIV. 665., XeXvto and datvvro would be an abandonment of the optative, whose iota is absorbed by the kindred v on account of the following r ; for the diph- thong vi never occurs before a consonant. Note 2. — All forms which in the optative take the connective vowel instead of the verbal characteristic are accented accord- GREEK ACCENTUATION. *25 ing to the rule of verbs with the connective vowel : MSoivto, TTpoSoiro, &c. Only in the aor. 2. of trj/it, such an accentuation is objectionable on the same grounds as have been adduced above against the conjunctives irpo^G^e, 7rpow/xat, instead of 7rpor)$re-eva.L, rv$i]vai. GREEK ACCENTUATION. 27 plural ; for vr omitted before ev for lrpd(pr}(jav (Comp. Schol. Venet. II. XX. 279.), and Odyss. XXI. 377. fi&iev for juE^irjcrav. Yet probably in the two passages irpa^sv and /meSitv are to be preferred '. See p. 15. For what the grammarian Callimachus has invented was foreign to Homer, 2. The conjunctive, infinitive, and participle are accented en- tirely according to the law of verbs without the connective vowel. The conjunctive is formed by annexing the connective vowel to the temporal characteristic of the two aorists. This in the aor. 1. is &c, and in the aor. 2. e, consequently tv(j>%£<±> and tv- irtiA), the Ionic dialect still retaining the resolved form. V. Mat- taire, p. 122. C. Sturz. But these forms never appear thus re- solved in the Attic dialect, but always contracted, consequently tv((>%(v, TV7rd). This temporal characteristic appears, 1. as short, after the analogy of tl&eiul&v, risers, in the conjunctive (rvtyStu) tv(J)Sw, rvirko tvttw), the optative (rvx £ra £ - ? But a stronger argument against it is to be drawn from the remark of grammarians (V. Schol. Venet. II. VI. 268), that in evx^daa^ai the a of the syllable aa% is short: a certain proof that no contraction from evxzrdsvSai must be thought of. The thing however is explained at once by supposing a to be a connective vowel instead of £, and in this there is nothing more strange than in the aor. 1. act. and mid. invariably, and the perf. act. in the indicative, having a for the connective vowel. The original shortness of this a will also explain, why the form aarai never occurs in Homer as the so called prolongation. (See Buttmann, Lexilogus I. p. 9. ; Pha- vorin. p. 1381. 9.) Ei>x £T « arcu f° r example would have suited hexameter only in the measure l^^l-, which the short- ness of a did not admit. Note 2. — The accentuation ta for Ida, of which Eustathius, GREEK ACCENTUATION. 31 II. p. 546. speaks, has been correctly changed into la in the editions. Nqte 3. — Oura (Horn. II. IV. 525.), and other similar forms, are not to be explained by a syncope of the syllable ore of the aor. I. but by an omission of the connective vowel: ovtcle, properly ovra; but without £, ovra. Exactly in the same manner must be explained the shortness in the ad- verbially employed imperative (rtya, instead of aiya, from cr'tyae. 2. The common mode of contraction in verbs pure, it is well known, is that which contracts the connective vowel with the termination, when this appears as an independent syllable (o, at): e(j)iXko, tyikzov, and then contracted once more £(j>i\ov ; but in Epic authors examples occur, in which the con- nective vowel is contracted with the characteristic vowel: vkm i>uai t fuivSieai fivSsiaL, without occasioning any change in the laws of accentuation. Hereto belongs 6pr)cu, from opasat opaai, and Ion. £ instead of a, bpriat. See Buttmann, Ausf. Gr. Gr. p. 505. Phavorin. p. 1574. 33. Also the infinitives in av : opav (opazsv, opasv, opav) belong to this class. 3. The Dorians take the syllable o-s as temporal characteristic of the fut. I. act. and mid. ; hence in this future there is a con- traction, r}jov {(prjyo the nominal root, o the termination), $rjyo-t, (jyriyol, ultimately $rjyw. On the contrary, the accusative and vocative retain in all numbers and cases the accent of the nominative, which likewise remains in all numbers the same as in the sin- gular. The reason is, that the accusative and vocative were originally not different from the nominative. GENERAL OBSERVATIONS. I. Substantives constantly preserve the accent on the same syllable in all cases, except the genitive plural. Thus dyysXia, dyyzXiai, a^urj, d SsGTrora (SecnroTrjg). Adjectives, however, of the same form deviate from this accentuation. Among these, vefeXriyeptTa must not be classed, since it so designates the character of Zeus, as to produce a clear recognition of him without the addition of his name, in the same manner as ymr)oxog, £Karijj3oXoc, &c, when standing independently, may be considered as substantives; comp. §. 35. Note 3. A£(T7rorrjc in the vocative draws its accent upon the first syl- lable : SeWora. §. 21. Feminines in a. I. a after vowels. a. Those contracted from a« into a are all perispome : 'A-S^va D 2 36 GREEK ACCENTUATION. ('ASrjvaa), juva. Consequently when resolved they are naturally paroxytone : Naucri/caa, eXaa. b. Of those in ata : 1. The dissyllables are properispome : yata, ata, jutala, ypala. 2. Polysyllables on the contrary, when lengthened like ad- jectives from forms in rj and a, are paroxytone: 'ASijvcua, Evvaia, avpjULaia, KaXajuaia, j3aa, (jteXeio., irapeia, dpsid. 2. Plural names of towns in eai and eiat are oxytone : Ktyxpsai, 'Opvtat (also 'Opvacu), BpvvEiai, Avysiai, Quai. e. 1. Those in id are mostly paroxytone, particularly in the abstract sense : dvdpia, SiSacncaXia, dyysXla, XuTovpyla. 2. Some concretes with a collective signification are oxytone : icaXid, po$(*)vid, Iwvid, Kpivwvid, veorrta, cnroyyid, XaXid, opyvid, nvpicdid, 7ro ' a : on fy (TTO "' remains oxytone. This peculiarity of accentuation extends also to other oxytones: aeipd, aipa, Supd, $£pa. Eust. II. p. 914. 23. Also the Attic ?w?7, Ionic £ot?, may be referred hereto: but the proparoxytone then becomes oxytone ; tcarappori, eirixpod, irepnrvoii. g. Those in via draw the accent as far back as possible, a being always short : fivla, opyvia, dyvia, viicvia, "EXks'&via, ^QtpdSvia, Qvia. Note. — In all^these forms (also in those under f) the oldest Attics held a for long. Hence they accented dyvoia, vsKvla y &c. Mrirpvid, bpyvid, and dyvtd, are oxytone with the Attics, but in Homer follow the general accentuation, II. XXIII, 327. XX. 254. 2. Those in va are paroxytone : 6%va, Kapvd, Kb>$va. Mdvrvd (Mantua) alone is accented according to the example of the Romans. The others are said to terminate properly in ??. h. The few in wa (for the most part properly feminines of adjectives in woq) are paroxytone : wa, fxvwa, Miviga. The forms 7rwd and vpa. Note. — Nouns in rpa, Spa, Spa have all a long : therefore KXvTai/nvriaTpa, 'HAtKrpa, Xoviorpa, KaaavSpa, kviSpa, Ka§i- Spa, dXivdr'ftpa, KoXvfifirjSpa. Only Arunr)Tpa(rj) and cfkoXo- 7T£v$pa have short a. 2. If the penultimate be short the last syllable is usually long : triavpa, iroptyvpd, 'E^vpa (not "E^vpa, V. Arcad. p. 101. 1*2.), rijuipa ; in KoWvpa the last two syllables are long. 3. Of polysyllables in wpa, (fraXupa, 7rXr)%u)pa } XrjSwpa, Ylav- Swpa, bwdipa are paroxytone, ^aXirwpa and iXirwpd oxytone. 4. Those of which masculine forms in pog are extant retain the accent, which they had according to the laws of adjectives (§. 30.) : 'Eraipa (kralpog), hrapa (erapog), TXvicepd (yXvicspog), EKvpa {kicvpog), 'Epu^peu (IpvSpog), 7repiaT£pa, apiGTEpa, 7T£vSepd. Qaidpa draws back its accent, because QalSpog does the same. Note. — Plural names of towns are usually oxytone (did to 7TEpiEKTiKov etvai) ; therefore it frequently happens that these names are oxytone contrary to the accent of their masculines : 'EXcuS'spat (eXzvSepog), Horviai, ttotvicl. In 'EpuS'pcu (epv^pog) the accentuation agrees, that of 'EpvSpai or "EpuSpat being- contrary to the analogy of these names. 5. Those derived from other words by change of sound are oxytone : Sopd ($$"sipa>, e^opa), dyopd (dysipco), j3opa, \apd, (j>opd, dpd, 0wpa, Sopd, Kovpd, ovpd, aeipd, typovpd, irXsvpd, Xsvpd. They retain their accent in composition. 6. Of dissyllables those are properispome which have a diph- thong in the first syllable, but those which have a vowel long by nature in the first syllable are paroxytone : fiolpa, alpa, evcrrpa, (jTeipa, 'Kpa, xhp a > X^P a ' upa. Note 1.. — All in avpa are paroxytone : avpa (Avpa proper name, Etym. M.), a Aristoph. Eq. 1 186. Aaj3Sa in Herodot. V. 92. is an exception. §. 22. Feminities in 17. I. General laws. a. Those formed by contraction from ea are perispome : aXw7r- £/cf/, \eovrr), yaXfj, gvkji, dfivy^aXr), kvvt), (j>aicri, yi), 7rap^aXr)j d^eXcpidri. b. Those derived from the perf. pass., perf. 2. or aor. 2. act. of verbs are oxytone. So all which have o in the penultimate, the verb from which they are derived having e instead of it. The latter are mostly to be recognised in the change of sound : ypafx- jJLT) (yiypafifiai), Tifiri (rerijuai), ariyfiri, fipvyjir}, /ioX?r?7, dfjLOLJ3ri, (ttoXt), (p^foyyr], oljuttoyrj, ir^jiavri, /uovfj, ttoSt), apTrayri, ypar] 3 dvaroXr), Bida)(fj, rapa\{], dirodo^r], (popfirj, (3ov\ri, a/cor?, (TKa^fj, GTpocpi], rpo(j)rj, TpoTvi], poiri], (nrovdrj, vofir), oXk??, kXo7T»7, Sokt], ypr\ (X£w), poy] (pitj). See Eustath. II. p. 539. Note I. — 'Apwdyr} (hook) is distinguished from apirayr} (rape) ; in like manner cncdfyr} (skiff) from cnccKpri (pit). Note 2. — In composition these words retain their accent : TOfii], k7rirofJLr}. Only dvappor}, v^poppor], KaWippor}, olvo)(or}, icrroSoicn, KcnrvoSotcr} draw it back. See Eustath. II. p. 992. 57. Schol. Venet. II. XIV. 372. According to this is Elmsley on Aristoph. Ach. 922. to be corrected. II. i] after vowels. a. Those in ari and vri are paroxytone : kavdr], Siyvri, opvt], Aifivri,x\zvr], K£vt), Ssvri, Evr], Note. — Skeu>7, together with its compounds Karaaiaivri, &c. and Qvri, are oxytone. b. Those in or) and wy) are oxytone : fiori, \°V) vrvor], Zwri, Siori, tjow/j, dXtoi). GREEK ACCENTUATION. 41 Note. — Ootj, Olvot], and XAorj, as proper names, are paroxy- tone. On $drj see the preced. §.y. Note. III. v after liquids. a. 1. Those in At? which have a diphthong in the penultimate are oxytone : avXri, evXri, dirsikij, wruXyj, ovXrj (scar). Note. — OvXat (offering-barley) was barytone, but it is better to class it also with oxytones. Conf. §. 30. II. a. §. 21. f. Note. In like manner Sa'A*?, QovXrj, SotjAtj. See Etym. M. v. EvXai. Schol. II. Venet. XIX. 26. Buttmann, Lexil. 1. p. 194. Ac- cording to Eustath. ad II. p. 1169. 39. ovXri (offering-barley) was oxytone, but ovAti (xAcuva) barytone. 2. Those in aXrj, eAtt, tjAt], oAt?, tArj, vXyj follow the general rule, and are paroxytone : 7rdXr}, ZdXrj, Sf/xfArj, dyiXrj, ottjAtt, yap.i{Xr], fiapiXr}, jUuartAr7, avXri, 'AyyeXrj, TravreXr) (V. Steph. Byz. v. 'AyyeAr^), /a^aArj, ya/uL^Xr}, X^'b ^vXrj are oxytone. 3. Those in wAri are oxytone if they be not proper names : 7rav(TioXrj, TspTrioXri, evx^Xtj. 'EpiwXri is paroxytone as a proper name, oxytone as an appellative. b. Those in /uri, if not belonging to I. b., are paroxytone ac- cording to the general rule : yvwfir), ^aa^r?, aXfir], \dpfir}, o-KaA/^r/, KaXdfirj, ^dfir], Kvfifxr), (prjfir}, ko/xt], jmvrjjuir], kwAtj/xtj. Note. — 'Opjuri, irvyfir}, deafirj, (jmSa/uLri are oxytone. But the first three belong rather to I. b. c. 1. Those in vr\ formed like participles are oxytone : c^a- ju€v?7, dafievr}, KXaZo/msvai. §. 14. Note 2. 2. All the rest in vy) are paroxytone, if not belonging to I. b. ; only (pspvri, /xrj^avi], avri, evvri, aicrivr], tyovr}, 0wvt?, rjdovri, ^Aey- fxovr], 7rXri<7fJLovri, xapjuovrf, KaXXovri, dy\ovi] (on ay^ovrj see the Appendix), ywr) are oxytone. Conf. Phavorin. v. BfAovrj. d. The few in pr} and ), avTpaTrri, fdoraviKr), 'Arrtfcr), j3torrj, Air^, rsAsrrj (pro- perly rfXeorrj ; formed like ciKO|0£roc) and TtXtvrri, dperri, JUTjXwr?], KEpWTT}, ELpKTri, CLK.TT], a/CO)K?7, lu)K.{), CUC?7, CLLKYl ', ^vXaKl] belongs to I. b.; ir6pirr\, although coming from irupix), is barytone. c. Those in 0tj, x*)> ?*! belong mostly to I. #. ; hence they are oxytone. Those which do not belong to that class are barytone conformably to rule : they are St^rj (Styai), c/ca^^, a/caX^n, rt»xn, fJidxn, iiaXayr), jiiaXS^, 7t73 - 7f, o7ra3"Tj, and all proper names of this ending. Kp&ri is oxytone. As a result of the several rules on the accentuation of all the words of the first declension it appears, that the primitives and proper names, as the oldest words of the language, have re- mained faithful to the old iEolic law of accentuation ; they are all barytone ; on the contrary, derivative words, as formations grafted on those older, are oxytone. This has been explained §§. 7, 8. SECOND DECLENSION. §. 23. Masculines and feminines in og. I. og after vowels. Those in aog, vog, rjog, tog, wg are oxytone : vaog, Xaog, vvog, vlog, fiopfivXiog, xapaSpiog, alyvmog, tpwdiog (and generally 12 GREEK ACCENTUATION. 43 the names of birds in tog), irr\6g, Tirvog, TaXaog, St/pEoc, avfyeog, Saog, a^cX^coc (Ionic), dSeXQiSEog. (On those in tog S. Phavor. p. 1121. 21.), ave\piog, tpiveog, oxeog, augzog, KoXoiog, 'A^atoc, 'iXXvptog, 'Aer/cAi]7noc, Kpiog, jdiog (bow), fxovtog, ^Trzpyziog, ''AXtyuog, IlrjvEiog. Aapeiog forms an exception. Note 1. Several in iog (which properly may be considered as adjectives) are barytone : SaKTvXiog, 'ASrivaiog (Athenian), 'ASrivaiog (a man's name), and other gentilia in iog, together with most proper names : 'Ayvppiog, Kplog, Xiog, &c. Even 'AvicXrimog and dveipiog were in Homer's time still proparoxy- tone. Eust. 11. p. 860. 10. Compositions with dv&piog are proparoxytone : i^avk^iog. S. Eustath. p. 971. 25. Note 2. — Most proper names in aiog are proparoxytone if derived from similar properispome adjectives, so Tip.aiog 7 *A$rivaiog. Tpvydiog, 'landtag, &c. are properispome. Conf. Schol. Aristoph. Pac. 62. Note 3. — Some proper names of three short syllables (w v> *J)> to distinguish them from adjectives of similar forma- tion, are paroxytone : BaXiog, 'PoSt'oe, Sx f ^'°£> KXoviog, 'O^iog, AoXioc, Tv^iog, Apaiciog, KXvriog, ^rpariog, Qpaaiog, Xpofiiog, Qpvyiog, liXvTiog, &c. Biog (life) for distinction from fiiog (bow) is barytone. Note 4.- — The words vKopiriog, vvjuufriog, and yop.^>iog are paroxytone, probably formed by syncope. Note 5. — Simple oxytone forms in eog and barytones in oog, when contracted into ovg, take the circumflex, in conformity with the rule to be laid down in adjectives, that all simple nouns in sog and oog are contracted into ovg : ddeX^ideog (falsely given in lexicons either d^eXdXog, crTvXog, KTiXog ; so also when a mute pre- cedes Xog : (5ij5Xog, f5vj5Xog, 6\Xog y KoyXog, kukAoc, ni-irXog ; 44 GREEK ACCENTUATION. but if X be preceded by a long vowel, or a diphthong, or another X, these words are oxytone : avXog, KavXog, w^Xog, j3)?Xoc, SaXoe, fiaXXog, payfi6g, mciad/nog, Saafiog, avy KaXv/afjLog, $£(T[i6g, Xjorjo-juoe, aTracr/uog, \paX[i6g, Svjuiog, j(Vfxog. 2. All proper names in a/uiog and all other words in afiog of the measure ^ w w are barytone : Uplafiog, Tvprafiog, liipya- fiog, Ylvpafiog, Tevrafiog, KaXa/mog, ^dXafiog, Kva.fA.og, aprafiog. Note. — Horapog is oxytone. 3. Words in ajiog of the measure _ ^ w are oxytone : ovXa- fiog, x^pajiLog, povpog, ay pog, sicvpog, Aoicpog, larpog are oxy- tone, kralpog properispome. e. Words in aaog and aog are oxytone : Kiaaog, 7T£og, dog, KE7T(j)og, fiocr^og, Tpoyog (course), /uvSog, Zr\Sog, irropSog, yovSog, ipoSog, Xrjicv&og, aicvSog, Xafiv- pivSog, fjirjpivSog, "OXvvSog, ipajuaSog. Note 1. — 'ASeA^oc (properly ddeXtyeog), GTpovSog, fiot^og (properly adjective), j3orj3"oe (from j3orj$ooe; s. the adjectives), op/iaSog and dXtyog are oxytone. So fionfyog in Euripides. S. Eustath. p. 1761. 20. Yet in Bekk. Anecd. p. 107. it is paroxytone with more analogy, ^rpov^og is in Attic better properispome. Schol. Aristoph. Av. 876. The Attics barytone adsX^E the vocative of d^X(p6g» Note 2. — The Doric accus. pi. of masculines was og instead of ovg, but this syllable is considered long in reference to the accent. Thus SvcnczpKog dXwweicag instead of SvaicipKOvg. §• 24. Neuters in ov. 1. No neuter in ov is oxytone except cXfov, nrspov, £vyov, ipTTETov, Xovrpov (water for the bath, Xovrpov bathing-place), and wov. To these are added, but improperly, the derivatives from verbal adjectives, as Qvrov, pvrov, fiorov, and the hetero- clites $£u)g (pd)Toiv (pd)Tix)v, Kpdrojv. (Eustath. p. 1715. 58.) Hvp has already in the nominative plural the heteroclite form irvpd (from irvpov), consequently also 7rvpwv according to the second declension (Eustath. II. p. 43.). If inflected according to the third it would give irvpa Trvpuv. 2. All nouns having e or cu for the nominal characteristic : Swg 3"wwv $g. But Herodian opposed this, Bekk. Anecd. p. 1209. and with reason; for the Attics accented even Kpiug according to the rule. Hence it is also clear, that the accentuation of the genitive of x°^C> which according to Elmsley (Aristoph. Ach. 1013.) must be X 0( *>g, n °t X 0( ^£' * s without analogy. For vEa>g belongs to an entirely different class. S. §. 27. III. GREEK ACCENTUATION. 51 Note 2. — The genitives Sovptov and yovvtov (not Sovpiov yowcov) belong as heteroclites to the second declension. Note 3. — Some proper names are also excepted, as M/jv Myvog, QCjv Qiovog, "£l\p ^Qi-rrog, which conform to the old accentuation still obtaining e. g. in the monosyllabic parti- ciples. The same accentuation is followed in the dual and plural of wag: wavroiv wclvtlov waai, and of the compounds of sig : fir\&ivb)v firjdecn. Note 4. — The accentuation of monosyllables is followed by the syncopised forms in rjp and wv : waH}p warpog warpi, kvwv Kvvog, Svyarrip Srvyarpog SvyaTpi, &c. ; together with yvvri yvvaiicog yvvaiKi yvvaiKa, &c. (the word was pronounced yvaiKog yvaiizi yvaaza) and $6pv in the dative Sop'i. b. Nominative. — The JEolians accented all monosyllables with the circumflex, because they had no oxytones. Conf. Gramm. Meerm. ap. Schaef. Greg. p. 662. The remaining dialects have retained this old accentuation only 1. in monosyllabic neuters without exception: (j>Cog (light), ovg, wvp f wav, o-Kwp (not aicivp), aralg (not araig), Kr\p, ypv, and names of letters, julv, vv f £t, ou, wl, p(o, gclv (not aav. S. Theod.), rav, v, a, $1, }(7, w ; the neuters are the oldest substantives of the language, and consequently retain the oldest zEofic accentuation ; 2. in those masculines and feminines whose accusative is parisyllabic with the nominative ; L e. in all whose accusative terminates in v, and vocative in a vowel : Xlg Xiv (not Xig Aiv), Kig klv (not Kig klv), ypavg ypavv, fjivg /uvv, Spvg Spvv, avg avv, vavg vavv ; 3. in some with a con- tracted nominative, as QpaiZ, Qpq%, j3oa£ /3w£, waig walg (also Epic accusative waiv } voc. wat), wp6i% wpoL%. Note 1. — The Attics also accented yXav% with a circumflex, the other dialects, on the contrary, having it oxytone, yXav^. So TauS, a river in Sicily. KAa'e, although kXelv in the ac- cusative, has the nominative oxytone, because S is the charac- teristic. On those in ig, which Aristarchus oxy toned without exception, see Eustath. II. p. 841. 21. 857. 33. Aristarchus was led to the accentuation Xlg Xiv, Kig klv by the totally different icAac kXuv ; for, according to Etym. M. p. 567. he inflected Xig Xivog. Comp. Herm. ad Eurip. Bacch. 1166. E 2 52 GREEK ACCENTUATION. JEschrion correctly accented \lg \1v } kXq kXv. Conf. Phavor. p. 1185. 14. Note 2. — All the rest whose accusative is dissyllabic, i. e. terminates in a, are oxytone in the nominative : Zeuc, m|, . Sripj-Swg, (pug (man), (ptog (mark of a burn), Tpug, §/xwe, ?c> (j>piiv, \r]v, ^>wp, cWc, dag (from da'ig), irovg, not irovg, which supposes an accusative ttovv, voc. ttov, that can never occur from the simple irovg. S. Apollon. adv. p. 554. Note 3. — Compounds with monosyllabic nouns of the third declension follow the general law of accentuation : 2a/xo^pa$, ^a/ULoSpaKog. §. 26. II. Polysyllables. General Observations. 1. As long as the principal laws permit, the accent remains on the syllable which possesses it in the nominative. Only the vocative, which is the oldest form of the nominative, sometimes changes the accent after the iEolic manner, as is shewn in the individual examples of oxytones. In forms paroxytoned in the nominative, which in the vocative shorten the syllable contain- ing the nominal characteristic, the accent usually approaches as near as possible to the principal idea : "AttoWiov "AttoWov (Xtov is the syllable containing the nominal characteristic v. The nominal characteristic is that letter which next remains after throwing away the termination : x A7r6X\cov-og). 2. No neuter is oxytone. They have all the accent on the syllable containing the idea, or on that which stands as near as possible to the syllable containing the idea. 3. No simple noun substantive in 2 or \p of more than one syllable is oxytone, and none is prop aroxy tone in the nomi- native ; they are all either paroxytone or properispome. Here i and v before ? and \p are always considered short for the ac- cent, so that all in which a, e, i, o, or v precedes %, or \p are pro- perispome if the penultimate be naturally long. Conf. Theodos. p. 238. Gottl. Draco, p. 44. Thus Qoivil, BoXdvZ, rjAt$, SwpaZ, Ko\avpd\p, KvicXioip, avXa^. GREEK ACCENTUATION. 53 Note. — Aristarchus considered that irripvZ,, when standing in a collective sense, as II. II. 316., should be oxytone, rrrepvt Conf. Eustath. II. p. 229. Etym. M. v. Uripvt Phavor. p. 1 595. This accentuation, however, rests upon no grounds, and is contrary to all analogy. With as little reason can we say tw£. The several words not comprised under the above (neuters and nouns in £ and \p) are classed here according to their nominal characteristic. I. Words whose characteristic is a vowel. E. 1. All words in svg are oxytone. In the vocative, when g of the termination is dropped they take the circumflex instead of the acute : ficKriXevg, fiaaiX'cv. No vocative of the third de- clension is oxytone if it be really distinguished from the nomi- native by a peculiar form, because, being the oldest form of the nominative it follows the oldest yEolic accentuation, which re- cognizes no oxytone. Those only in ig and vg remain oxytone. 2. Those in rig, of which very few occur, are either barytone or perispome : rpiyjprig, 'HpaicXrig. The former is properly an adjective, and like all adjectives in rjprjc, has the peculiarity of not passing the accent over the syllable rjp, because it is formed by contraction : hence the vocative is Tpiriptg, not rpiripeg. It is also peculiar in dropping its characteristic s in the genitive plural (§. 34. d. Note), hence rpiripuv ; rpiripEtov being wholly false. The Attics say rpt/jpwv (as yypvg. With long v they are either oxytone or perispome : w\ri%vg, vrjdvg, ix^vg, l$r}Tvg, 6'iZvg, 'Epivvvg, l^vg, oacjtvg, ocppvg. Note 1. — 'I^Sue, l£,vg, oafyvg, 6(ppvg occur also as perispome, which, at an earlier period, was probably the case with all these oxytones. If the nominative be perispome the accu- sative is parisyllabic. Herodian. Dindorf. p. 31. says: *X^c> ocr^vg, otypvg, have this accentuation only when they are feminine. Note 2. — On the oblique cases of those which change their vowels, as trrixvg, tt^xzuv, see §. 27. on the Attic declension. H. — There is only one Greek substantive with the charac- teristic rj : "Aprig^'Apriog, which, however, may perhaps be better derived from the iEolic "Apevg "Apvog. Q" — The few of this kind are paroxytone : npwg, aXcjg, "A$wg, yaXiog. II. Words whose characteristic is a liquid. N. — a. Words in which a, e, r?, or 7 precedes v are all oxytone : 'AXjc/iav, /j.eyi(jrdv, Xifirjv (Xifievog), kt\^{]V {Kr\(^r\vog), laariv (to-cri?- vog), Sz\(j)ig $£X(pTvog, aicrig aicrivog. Note 1. — Only "EAArjv, uprjv, and compounds, whose idea is consequently enlarged by composition, are paroxytone : apx L ~ 7roifA7)Vi QiXoTToifAiiV) Eviratav, TiTavoirav, ^EpfioTrav. Note 2. — Apollonius de conjunct, p. 570. marks fieyiarav, Zvvav, and vtav with the circumflex ; so also wVctv, as from w Irav. This accentuation, however, would only be possible in contraction from awv into av ; but even here we find 'lay (from'Iawv) oxytone. Hence in Apollonius it is probably more correct to follow Bast (Add. ad Greg. Cor. p. 904.) by ac- centing fjityiGTav, %vvav, vsav, which is confirmed by the form Aapudv (from AaptTog, as vtav from viog) in ^Eschyl. Pers. 650. If Irav be from lrr\g, the only correct writing is & \av. Comp. Herm. ad Soph. Phil. 1373. and Reisig. Conf. I. p. 217. GREEK ACCENTUATION. 55 Didymus (in Phavorin. p. 1898. 35.) wished to have made the whole w trav, viz. from trrjg vocative era, Doric (?) Irav. In such case a catastrophe of the accent would take place in b) Vav. But the derivation of Apollonius is manifestly pre- ferable. #. Those in vv are barytone : fioavvv, ttoXtvv, &c. c. 1. All proper names in wv with a vowel preceding are barytone : 'A/z^iwv, *Twv, Kpovtwv, Ovpav'uov, 'Arpdwv, IT17X- diov, Xatt)v (not Xad)v, as in Aristoph. Eq. 78.). 2. All feminines in wv are oxytone : ^AtSwv, KaXvSojv, K0X0- oiviK(i)v, %Tnrwv, fcua/xtov, j3owv ; also all names of months : Ilvav&piwv, YafAK)\ui>v T MaifiaKTripiwy ; besides all in scjv, as kvkeojv, )(apaSp£(i)v, afjnreXeujv, aKavSsojv, and a great many names of places : 'EXikcjv, av\wv. 4. Those in /3wv, yo)v, Sujv which retain w in the genitive are barytone : Tpifiwv, ctju|3u>v, 7rvpyvoq belongs to 2 ; but oxytone when they have o in the genitive : aAsicrpuwv, oXek- Tpvovog, Tripvujv, 'A/uKpiKrvujv, KepKViov. P. — All in rip are oxytone : except the names of nations, IKrjp and "Ij3rjp, and compounds, as irav%r)p ; besides [ifirrip, ^vyarrjp, dvarrip. These last three, however, proceed in the oblique cases, as if they had been oxytone in the nominative : /j.r,rr)p, firiTipog, iir\r£pi. Vocative. — Besides fiiirrfp, SvyaTrip, elvdrr]p > also dvi'ip, og, j3aAj3t'e |3aAj3t£oe. BtpStc (Ace. Bev- £tv), MoAtc MoAiSog MoAtv, Araprlg 'AraprXv are Thracian names. Theod. p. 243. 3. Of the words in Xg "iSog those only are barytone which can take v as termination in the accusative; such as cannot take this are oxytone : "Aprs/uig " Apraju.iv. "Hlpig "EjO kijk\Iq /ay/cAiSa. The feminines derived from oxytone or paroxytone masculines retain the accent of these masculines : AlrtoXog AlrwXig, itcir^g iKirig, Stcnrorrig dtanrorig, To^orrig ro£,6rig, ^TTapridrrjg 2tt a pricing, irpsafivrrig 7rps(rj3vrig. Those only which are formed from urasculine or feminine pro- paroxytones and dissyllabic barytones are oxytone : Kairr^Xog KairrjXig, AdpSavog Aapdavig, alxftdXwrog alxfiaXwrig, Ylipdrjg YlEpaig, Mifiog Mt]d(g. Those derived from nouns of the third declension are oxytone : KeKpoirig, AlSioirig, Apvoirig. ^Kv^g gives ^icvSig and SkuSt'c ; KainiXog KanriXig and KcnrnXig (dimi- nutive). 58 GREEK ACCENTUATION. Note. — From Kopuvlg Hesiod formed the accusative Kopio- viv (See Schol. Pynd. Pyth. III. 14.). But it may perhaps be assumed, that with him the nominative was also Kopwig, and therefore the accusative KoptovLv. On KdirrjXig and Kawri- Xigsee Schol. Arist. Plut. 1121. 4. All in vg vdog are oxytone : XXafivg xXafivSog, Sayvg SayvSog. G. — All that have $ for characteristic are barytone : dyXig ayXtiog (Arist. Ach. 763. Vesp. 680.), &XXig BiXXiZog, 6pvig opv&og, Kopvg KopvSog, eXjULivg eX/mvOog (probably better eXfiig.). Note. — In Chceroboscus, Bekk. Anecd. p. 1208. we find dyvvg dyvvSzg, a late word. BaXXig is barytone in Theod. p. 94., oxytone in Draco, p. 23. and Phavor. T. — All that have r for characteristic are barytone : KiXrjg, Xij5t)g, %dpig, yiyag yiyavrog ; the words dvSpidg dvSpidvrog, 1/mdg Lfidvrog, and some of the feminines in rr\g rr^rog are oxytone with the Attics: Sriiorrig, KOvQorrjg, Tayyrrig, fipadvrrjg, rpa^vr^g, dBporrig, l6(ov. Others see in Herodian. Dindorf. p. 9. 2. The following in ag : TreXEKcig TreXeicavTog (not TrsXiicag. See Schol. Aristoph. Av. 882.), IXag iXavTog, dXXag aXXavrog, and TXivaag TXicrcravTog, Chcerob. ap. Bekk. Anecd. p. 1186. According to Herodian these forms are contractions from deig ; in which case they should properly have the subscript iota. Conf. Eustath. p. 269. 3. Contrac- tions from ostg, as 'Oirovg, nXaicovg, QXiovg, 'AXipovg. Peculiarities in the accentuation of some Words. In the vocative. — 1. Some in wv, that are not compounded, leave the accent in the vocative on the same syllable, which was accented in the nominative, although the termination is shortened: AaKeSaijULiov gives AaKeSaT/iiov, not AaKtSaifiov ; in like manner HaXaijunov UaXaXfxov, <£>iXr}[iwv OtXr//.ioi/ ? No/^wv Notjjuov, 'iKtrawv 12 GREEK ACCENTUATION. 59 'Ikztciov, Maxau)v Max^ov, 'Apsltov 'Apuov. These are the only words in cov which have this peculiarity of the vocative. See Chcerobosc. ap. Bekk. Anecd. p. 1245. sq., Etym. Gudian. v. "A^oXXov ; the rest, more especially the compounds, all conform to the given law *) ; for we are not speaking here of compounds, the latter half of which is monosyllabic ; these remain accented according to the natural law : AvizoQpwv gives AvKO(f>pov, Kap- T£p6(ppi*)V KapT£pu (from Bopiao, where ao is contracted into w ; here one must not with Eustath. p. 1771. 59. assume a syncope, which occurs only in the Attic form Boppsw), 'Epjiiag 'Epjuito, QaXiag eaXko, IlvSiag YlvStu, Av%iag AvUoj (Herod. I. 170. V. 7. Schol. Aristoph. Nub. 79.). These contracted forms in r)g and ag would, if complete, have been according to the Attic usage, Bopkw, QaXkd), 'Epfihw, Uv^ieo); but the Attics reject the first t altogether; the second £ in tw could not be ac- cented, being a vowel formed by change from a, therefore GREEK ACCENTUATION. Gi the Attics could only accent Bopptw, OtiAsw, JQvS^w (as if from Boppag, QdXag (OaXrjc), n^Sae (Ilu£rr)e),) because they are not accustomed to contract the ao of the termination of the first declension into w, like the Ionians, but only into ov. II. The second declension is richest in Attic forms, because most words terminating in og belong to it. The few perispomes of this class in tog require little consideration here in respect to the accent, the to in them being already long in the nomina- tive, as formed by contraction, and therefore retaining the cir- cumflex through all the numbers and cases. They are Ktog, TXwg, Kptog, Tptog, names of towns; and the polysyllabic optptog, Tatog 1 , Xaywg. Conf. Schol. Aristoph. Vesp. 494. Av. 101. 1. Oxy tones of this inflection are 1. those which were already oxytone according to the common declension and the given rules: Aewg from Xaog, vetog from vaog, Xaytog from Xayog. It has before been remarked, that the genitives sing, of these no- minatives are never perispome, as conformably to rule they ought to be, but always oxytone like the nominative. The reason of this lies in the given law, that to when it stands in Attic for o (but o is the proper termination of the genit. sing, as remnant of the termination og ; see Buttmann, Ausf. Gr. Gramm. I. pag. 137.), never holds as a long quantity for the accent. Hence Xswg, gen. Xcw, dat. Xsto (now circumflexed, because t of the dative is added), ace. Xetov, dual. nom. ace. Asw, gen. Xeujv. plur. nom. Xsto, gen. Xeujv, dat. Xewg, ace. Xewg ; 2. the Egyp- tian proper names, 'Ivapwg, Tafitog, Nekwc, Ta^tuc, Tatog. 2. The paroxytones are those which were paroxytone accord- ing to the common declension : KaXtog (icaXog), yaXtog, aXtog, "AStog. Note. — When the Epic writers insert an o before tog, these forms become prop ar oxy tone, for this Attic to in tog is never long for accentuation. They even remain proparoxytone when to is really lengthened by the i of the dative, because the in- serted o is sounded so slightly, as scarcely to be heard: yd- Xotog, yaXoto, yaXoto^ ("AStog) " ASotog, "ASoto, "AS'ow. Accord- This writing is in Attic the only correct one ; for without ' in tag, which is the remnant of the digamma (pavo), the word in Attic would sound rewc according to Xewc. 6*2 GREEK ACCENTUATION. ing to the common declension these forms would have been yaXoog, "ASoog. Conf. Schol. Venet. 11. XIV. 229. Eustath. p. 980. 49. Steph. Byzant. v. "ASow, and p. 668. 33. That an analogy exists between the forms in owg and uog is shown by Kidjg and Koug. 3. The proparoxytones are those which were also propar- oxytone according to the common declension: MsviXaog MevI- Xsu)g, UriviXaog llrjvtXewc. Hereto belong also such nouns as ^LKepuyg, (friXoyiXwg (gen. (tficEpw, (pikoyeXd) ; for when the geni- tive ends in rog Saczptorog 0tXoy£*Xwroe, the nominative is par- oxytone, Bacipuyg, QiXoytXtog, and they do not then belong to the Attic forms of declension), raxvyvpiog, evyrjphyg, fia%vyr}pwg, £g ; oxytone, because e, as change of vowel from a, can no longer be accented ; subsequently the £, scarcely heard in the pronunciation, was dropped, and the word became ?wc, ?, ?wv ; yet only Zujq and ZcSv are extant. When the accu- sative is accented £o>v (see Bekk. Anecd. p. 1231.), this is ma- nifestly in imitation of Ptolemaeus, who also accented Zutg. See Schol. Venet. V. 887. Conf. ad Theodos. p. 228. 250. III. To the third Attic declension belong all those which change the characteristic vowel a, t, o, and v, in the oblique cases into £ ; consequently, 1 . the neuters in ag, K&ag KtS-s-og, yijpag yrip-e-og ; in og, ru\og TEi-y£-og ; in u, aarv aar-s-og, a form to be preferred throughout to the other aarttog, as is evident from the accentuation of the plural cktteojv; 2. the masculines and feminines in ig, iroXig iroX-E-wg, o(pig o^-E-tjg, (pifiaXig ipaX-E-tog ; in vg, irr\")(yg nrt^Ewg, TTeXsicvg TreXeKEwg, ey^eXvg £7X^ A£W £j an( ^ the siugle fern, vavg veujg. Of these the neu- ters are peculiar in not lengthening the o of the termination into w according to the Attic mode ; they can therefore accent the changed vowel e in the genitive plural (see p. 69.) : Ta^oc Tuyiu)v Tuyuvy aarv ckjthov, avSog av&£(i)v. On the con- trary, the masculines and feminines lengthen the termination, in the cases where this contains an O sound, namely, in the genitives. Hence the to in the genitives is invariably con- sidered as short in the paroxytoned forms; in qv for oiv in the dative dual, the is indeed long, but because the changed vowel e cannot be accented, when a lengthening of o into g %aov. Comp, the profound remarks of Buttmann in the Ausf. Gr. Gramm. I. p. 269. 2. The barytone feminine has its genitive plur. perispome in those adjectives, whose feminine takes a syllable more than the masculine (or, in other words, the feminines of adjectives of the third declension are perispome in the genit. plur.) ; the remaining GREEK ACCENTUATION. 65 adjectives, of which the number of syllables is the same in the masculine as in the feminine, make no distinction between mas- culine and feminine in the intonation of the genit. plur. ; hence yapieig yapizacra (yapi^crauiv), ri^vg T/Saa (rjSeKJjv), /uiiXag fii- \aiva (/jleXcilviov), and aytog ayta (ayitjv), tayarog la\a.Tr\ {loive6g, ereog, whence subsequently was formed \pvcovg from yjpvaeog, &c. as Sei/g from Seog, dSeXfyiSovg from dSeXtyideog (see §. 23. I. Note 4.) ; or we must with Doederlein consider \pvaovg, &c. to be formed from xpvaoeig, &c. Note 2. — Those, which put e before the syllable oc in the Ionic usage only, are oxytone : vXaiog, are proparoxytone. 3. Those in eiog, if polysyllabic, are proparoxytone: only GREEK ACCENTUATION. 67 (nrovdetog, dvdpetog, MevavSpelog, iraipuog, fisyaXeXog, aKareiog, 'HXaoc, ri^elog, iratduog (Arcad. p. 44. 18.), TrpvTavetog, yvvai- Kuog, 7rap$tvEiog (Conf. Schol. Aristoph. Av. 919.), oSvstog are properispome. Also Svvvuoq occurs as properispome in Aris- toph. Eq. 354. The Epic (parsLog is oxytone. Dissyllables are properispome : Seiog, Xtiog, -irXdog (dxptiog). Note. — Aristarchus also accents rapfyuag in Homer (II. XII. 158.), as if it came from Tapoi> again follows the rule. II. og after liquids. a. 1. Dissyllables in Xog of the quantity " u are paroxytone : XdXog, oXog, KoXog. If the first syllable be long (therefore the quantity ~ w ) they are oxytone: \pwX6g, ovXog (ovXai 1 ) from oXog, \uX6g (koAoc) (comp. §. 21. f. Note). Also SsiXog, x f ^°C> ipiXog, rpavXog. Only QavXog, BiiXog, ovXog (aidrfXog) are barytone. KaAo'e (« and a) is oxytone. 2. Those with the termination aXog and yXog are oxytone : ofiaXog, cnraXog, \^ajUiaX6g, eidu)X6g, djuaprwXog. ^irdp- rwXog and ^KioXog, as proper names, are barytone (Conf. Schol. Thuc. II. 79.) ; likewise swXog. b. Those in fiog are all barytone, and accented according to the rule : the later Attics accented ipr)p.og and trot/nog, the older together with Homer eprifiog, kroliiog. Note. — 'E^Xr/juo?, Ira/uog are oxytone ; vzo-)Qi6g a com- pound. 1 Buttmann (Lexilogus, p. 194.) doubts the analogy of this accent; but oXog gives in Ionic ovXog, as koXoq x\o£, dspi] deiprj, pba poid, XQ° a XP 0l ^> &*} Z^W- GREEK ACCENTUATION. 69 c. 1. Those in vog, wherein a consonant precedes v, are oxytone : reprrvog, arpvcpvog, layyog, ayvog, orvyvog, \ptSv6g, KtSvog, £^)£j3£vvoc, hpavvog, IpE/mvog, yvfxvog, epv/uvog, wvKVog, Kpanrvog. The contracts from forms in avog retain the accent : ILKuceSvog from /uaKedavog ; yoedvog (vEsch. Pers. 1040.) from yoedavog alone is not oxytone. Note — ^Kvfxvog is only a substantive, as vfivog. Conf. Schol. Venet. II. XVIII. 319. Eust. Odyss. p. 1653. 29. Phavor. p. 1663. 24. 2. In like manner, those, in which a diphthong or v or r\ pre- cedes v, are oxytone : iroSsivog, KsXatvog, dt\(j>oiv6g, Kaivog, KOivog, (JKorzivog, Trrrivog, Z,vv6g, (prfvog, aKfxr\vog (Od. 23. 191.). Kevog and arevog were in Ionic iczivog and aruvog ; only %zvog, although in Ionic tiuvog, is paroxytone. Xavvog is pro- perispome. 3. Those in avog and avog are oxytone : rpavog, Savog, ovtl- Savog, piy&avog, ir&avog, licavog, (rreyavog, alavog, fiafczdavog. 4. Those in Xvog and vvog are barytone, and accented con- formably to rule : XiSivog, Trripivog, wEVKivog, Sapcrvvog, SoXogv- vog. Only the derivatives from an adverb or from an idea of time are oxytone : irvicivog (irvKa), a^ivog (a3r)v), padivog, ^ £t ~ fiEpLvog (^a/ia), Szpivog (Sepog), jj.ear}fij5piv6g. In like manner, those in Ivog, as Xapivog, jueariiLifipivog. Conf. Arcad. p. 65. Note.- — On ay^iarlvog ; see §. 32. 5. Movog is accented regularly. d. 1. Polysyllables in apog are oxytone : ^Xiapog, \a\ap6g, Xnrapog, Xayapog, ipacpapog. $>\vapog is accented according to rule, aviapog, on the contrary, is oxytone; the former probably being a compound, the latter simple. 2. Those in spog are accented regularly; Kaprepog and dpi- (TTzpog are oxytone, together with all which have the measure ' w : yozpog, ispog, voepog, ipoyzp6g s jioytpog, dpoaepog, Kpa- TEpog. 3. Those in ripog and opog are oxytone : araprripog, rv^npog, oXicrrripog, ropog, fiox^ripog, irovnpog. The two last are pro- paroxytone with the Attics. 4. Those in vpog and avpog are oxytone: Xiyvpog, Kawvpog, 70 GREEK ACCENTUATION. aXfxvpog, 6\vpog, e\vpog, ajmavpog, atyavpog, ol^vpog* Only iravpog and yavpog are barytone. 5. Those in wpog are oxytone : ^Xtvpog, jmupog, Zwpog, fiXwpog. The older Attics accented /xwpoe. 6. Those in pog, wherein a consonant precedes p, are ox- ytone : vu)Spog, craSpog, ipvyjpog, KvSpog, l-^pog, alcrxpog, irvppog, GTEppog, IpvSpog, [wcpog, irevL^pog, aj5Xr}\pog. Only yXiaXaKp6g is so much the more remark- able. e. 1 . Those in aog of the measure * w are barytone : fiiaog, 'icrog, oaog, roaog. 2. Those in aaog, Zog, %og, \pog, are oxytone: pvvaog, wepKraog, Stcrcog, (pKTtrog, veoaaog. (Hereto, however, those under 1. when they double the £> Xo^og, (fxjj^og, koju^oc, yajunpog. III. og after mutes. All adjectives in og, when a mute precedes og, are oxytone : 1. GTpafiog, paifiog, tcwfiog, vfiog, tpsfifiog, yopyog, apyog, 7T7]y6g ("Apyog, as the proper name of a dog), vwSog, Kov$6g, luivvdog. 'OX'iyog, from oXiyiog, is alone paroxytone. 2. AevKog, yXavKog (TXavKog, a proper name), tcatcog (Kaicog, a proper name), /aaXaKog, SriXvKog, Aifivicog, XoLirog, ypvrrog, %aX£7roc? iravTo^airog, yapoirog, Xtrog ; all verbal adjectives in rog, or- dinals in r)g, vyiyg, irprivrig ; only 7r\riprig is barytone; 2. in vg: yXvicvg, fiapvg, fiSvg. Only ijfiKTvg, SrjX.vg, ripvg, aiciKvg, and irpiarjdvg, are barytone. So may we infer of %. Xa^yg and Xiyvg, from the accentuation of the feminines kXdxzia and Xiyua-, although in the masculine the latter now always appears as oxytone (see Eustath. p. 96. 4. Elmsl. on Soph. O. C. 671. is in error). There were therefore Xiyvg, Xiyua (Eustath. p. 1586. 13.), and Xiyvg, Xtysla. See Etym. M. p. 565. Aiyvg, as a proper name, is barytone. He- rodot. VII. 72. Eustath. p. 96. II. Adjectives having a Consonant for the Characteristic. They are all barytone : irivrig 7r£vr}Tog, rdXag raXavog, fiiXag fAtXavog, x a p' ul G X a P LevT °£> Tl ^ l Q TifflQ TifxijvTog. Only those in ag, a<$og (which probably belong rather to substantives) are oxytone : besides dpyi\g dpyrirog (dpyirog) and ekwv l/covroc. 72 GREEK ACCENTUATION. Note. — The accent remains on the same place in the mas- culine, feminine, and neuter : hnorriiLuv lmaXatcp6g is the mere remarkable, as the simple adjective dicpog is oxytone. 2. The remaining adjectives, the second dissyllabic half of which is formed from a transitive verb, with a short penultimate syllable, distinguish the active and passive signification. In 74 GREEK ACCENTUATION. the first case the word is paroxytone, in the second proparoxy- tone. Medea's sons therefore are fir\rpoKTovoi, murdered by their mother ; on the contrary, Orestes is p.r\TpoKTovog, murderer of his mother. To these belong also such as are more usual as substantives : fiovicoXog, aliroXog, odonropog, roiywpvyog, \aoa- aoog, dopvGGooQ, ^opv^oog, vr\oaa6og. The accentuation of j3orj- Soog conforms to the analogy of TOL\it)pvxog, although not a com- pound. Also (j>i\oX6yog as paroxytone is remarkable. <£iAoAo- yog signifies a prattler (see §. 34. 1. a.). a. It must be observed that this change of the accent does not take place when a preposition or sv forms the composition. Thus lirL(7K07rog, liriaTpotyog, tvGKOirog, djULi\dp-)(aiog, tcveQcuog, dtcpoKvifyaiog . Conf. Schol. Aristoph. Ach. 142. §. 34. THIRD DECLENSION. I. Having a Vowel for the Characteristic. 1. Those in r\g that derive their second half from a verb, if the first syllable be long, conform to the general law, accord- ing to which the accent is placed as near as possible to the syllable that heightens the idea of the word. The adjectives, therefore, with a long final syllable, can only be paroxytone, be- cause the length of this syllable does not allow the accent to be brought nearer to the added word. AvrdpKr\g (neuter avrapiceg, because now the shortened final syllable permits the accent to be placed upon the modifying word), 7roddpKYig (wodapKtg), avftddrig. 76 GREEK ACCENTUATION. Hereto belong all adjectives in wSrig, in so far as they are derived from the verb EIAQ. a. Compounds with prepositions, with ev, with a privative and intensive, with the privative vt\ or $vg, or with dpi, epi, 17/zi, ayav, 7ro\v, tray, apri, du and Za, are excepted, most of these compounds forming exceptions also in verbs by reason of the syllabic aug- ment. They conform to the accentuation of the simples, and like them are oxytone, because of these syllables some are not accented independently by the Greeks, and others never occur indepen- dently but always with an accompanying word which they define and modify, (comp. §. 34.) ; hence djuLEnQrig, aXrjS^c (a privat. and X^Sw), vr\fXEpriig, %v(jr\yjig, $vvrig is formed from a/cepato- (fravrjg. Note 1. — Compounds with /miy&og and ariXzypg, as tvfis- yl^rjg, vrrspfjiEyi^g, evoteAe^c, are always paroxytone. Also proper names, as Atoytvrjc, Atj/ulocf^evyic, and the compounds with f'roc, when they stand neutrally as substantives, SisTsg, rpiereg. As adjectives they are better oxytone. Conf. Lobeck. ad Phrynich. p. 407. Schol. Venet. ad II. XXIII. 266. Boeot. 272. Bekk. Anecd. p. 1375. Those in etijc appear originally to be adjectives of the first declension, those in ettiq of the third. At least only adjectives of the first declension can form feminines in trig. The case is the same therefore with adjectives compounded from etoc, as with v\pnrirr)g (of the first decl.) and vipnrerrig (of the third deck). Note 2. — The Epic syncopised forms in Erjg retain the accent on the syllable accented in the nominative : cWkAeijc (WkAeci, for SvcricXtia cW/cAsa. Note 3. — The rule on adjectives in rjg (gen. tog) may be thus simplified: all adjectives in rig (gen. iog) are oxytone; except of the simples only 7r\r)pr]g, of compounds those in apKrtg, rjSrjc, yicr}g, riprjg (apr)g), r\xnQ, fcrjrnc, wijc, (*)\rig, wSrig, toprig, and the compounds with /uEy&og and oteAexoc. 3. Compounds in vg draw the accent as near as possible to the amplifying or modifying part : wKvg irodwKvg. II. Having a Consonant for the Characteristic. 1. If the latter half of these words be dissyllabic, they are all, except \nrzpvi\g firoc), barytone; it therefore depends solely upon the quantity of the last syllable whether they must be pro- paroxytone or paroxytone : Trafijueyag, SvcrraXag, 7rafjLjui\ag : 78 GREEK ACCENTUATION. evKVTjfxig, iroXvKXriig(T), iroXvipr)pwv (in the neuter the accent remains 7rtpi6vu)g, dvTiZwg ; by retaining o they would necessarily be evvwg, KovQoviog, dvri^ojg. But in this respect they conform entirely to the accentuation of ad- jectives. See §. 33. II. 4. On the contrary, paroxytone ad- jectives in oog do not reject o ; hence cnrXoog, airXowg, airXiog. Note 2. — According to this rule &g and rug ought properly to be written &g and ra>e, as derived from oxytone forms (og and rog 3 gen. rov). This would correspond with the interro- gative 7njjg ; but they constitute an exception. Conf. Apollon. Bekk. Anecd. p. 523. 584. 940. Herodian. Dindorf. Note 3. — The Dorians perispomed adverbs from barytone pronoun adjectives in og : a\\wg (comp. dWd), Ti\vwg, ovrwg, 7ravTwg. Probably also riavyjug belongs to these, unless it were better to derive it from a lost riavxh^' Apollon. de adv. p. 581. 586. Phavor. p. 611. On the other hand, they or rather the iEolians barytoned adverbs from oxytone adjectives: a6(p(»)g, Ka\ii)g. See Phavor. in the above passage. Note 4. — All adverbs which have lost the g in (og are barytone : ourou, aa, Kcipra, iuia, alya, pifKpa, avra (laavTa), /uiiySa, ttvkcl, avSa, apa, dpa. Note. — 'AXXa and Safid are always oxytone, and Kpva also was accented by the Attics on the long final syllable, in con- tradistinction from Kjou^a. See Villoison. Anecd. II. p. 82. On those in Sa see below. 2. Polysyllables in em are barytone : ^i\dd£ia, TV7rddeia } rpo7rd- Seia, KpvQaSeia. Conf. Bekk. Anecd. p. 1364. 3. Those in Sa and $a are oxytone : icavaxn$a, dvatyavBd, drj^d, rpiypd, TtTpa^ftd. The iEolic alone are barytone : npocT^a, 67ri£TivSa, \r}Kivda, Kv(5r}(Tivda, fiv'ivda, cJieAjcuarivSa, fiaariXivda, yvrpiv^a, atviv§a, avTiKd, riviKa. f/ Ev£jca is proparoxytone. E. — Only TrjXe and 6^1 have this termination ; those in §£, ^£, and 3-£ being treated of in the following article. With the ex- ception, however, of oipe, the only oxytone of this termination, they are exclusively barytone. H. — Mostly datives. See the following §. (3.) I. — 1. Those in a, t, and rt are oxytone: Travoiicd, avTo&vd, GREEK ACCENTUATION. 81 TTacravSd, dd, irpuji, avro^upl, irayyvvaiKi, dwpi, vedxrri, dfAZTa- arpEirri, dvoi/uaoKri. II dXcu is barytone ; xa/nai, on the contrary, oxytone. Note 1.— "ApTi, dwdpTi, eri f a-xpi, /u.£Xp L > TTzpwh eicriTi (deKTjri), together with all in Qi, ;^t, $t, are barytone : vocrtyi, lt, vaixji, yxh "7X £ > "dSi, avSt. 'E*ca is perispome, ov\l oxytone. Note 2. — The Scholiast on Aristoph. Plut. 388. has diraprl. 2. Those in a/a are paroxytone : SrjSaKt, ttoXXuki. See those in A. Note. O. — AEvpo is barytone. Y. — Those in v are oxytone, if they be neuters of oxytone adjec- tives in vg: sv$v, evpv, fie(T(Tr}yv, fULera^v, &c. II a vv, on the con- trary, together with Trdyxy, irpoyyv, avsv, imipcpev, as not derived from oxytone adjectives, are barytone. Note. — The adv. dvriKpv {KaravriKpv) is oxytone, while av- TiKpvg is proparoxytone. Conf. Apollon. deadv. p. 614. Bekk. Lobeck. Phryn. p. 444. Bekk. Anecd. p. 1328. Probably avTLKpvQ is iEolic, dvriKpv more recent. The relation, there- fore, in this accentuation, is the reverse of x w j°''c X^P 1 - £2. — Those in w are all paroxytone, except wp^ from -rrpm, II. Those ending in Consonants. N. — 1. Adverbs in av and i\v, iv and vv, if not originally ac- cusatives of feminine oxytones, are barytone : Xiav, dyav, iripav, tt^rjv, dp$r}v, XdyBr^v, irXiySr}v, dpidriv^v, avardSr^v, W£pif5dSr}v, TFjOwrjv, jLtarrjv, irdXiv, (5icrx vv (Bekk. Anecd. p. 1354.), dvrr\v, ejuttX^v, kovrrjv, irafiirfi$riv. Nvv is perispomed as orthotone when it precedes ; but is enclitic when it follows. In prose writers it is always orthotone. 2. Those in $ov and pov are oxytone : dysXrjSov, XvktjSov, cfX^ov, avSrifxtpov (conf. Jungerm. ad Poll. I. 64.). "EvSov, as an exception, is barytone, together with (yrj/biepov and sfnr&ov. So also the compounds in Sov, as -njuLepoXeydov, JEsch. Pers. 63. P. — The few in ap are partly oxytone, as avrdp, drdp ; partly barytone, as atyap, vnap, avTrijuap, Travr\p.ap, Ivvrifiap, dSap, y, KTap. 2. — 1. Those in ag are mostly oxytone : Ivrvirdg, dyKag, img, G 82 GREEK ACCENTUATION. dvekag, dvSpaicdg ; only Zjunrag, 7r£Xag, aXiag, drpejiag are bary- tone ; also dvetcag, ivrvirag, ticac were barytoned by the Attics. Bekk. Aneed.p. 570.26. Note. — Instead of i^irag, Etym. M. p. 63. 21. accentuates Ijjlttclq. Conf. Apollon. apud Bekk. Anecd. p. 564. 2. In eg. — X§£g and l\^^ are oxytone. On IniT^sg see the following §. (4. b. Note). 3. Dissyllables in ig are barytone, monosyllables oxytone: /uoyig, /uoXig, dXig, d\ptg, peXP L C> avSig, %'ig, rpig. Only % W P^ (although x°J*s°0 anc ^ dfityig are oxytone. Those in Sig are oxy- tone : ofiadig, djuoi(3a<)ig, a/xj3oAa§t'c, atyvijSfe, Xa$pri$ig, kXw- 7rr]$ig, dvrr]dig, (TTOi^rjSig, d/u^iov^ig, e7riov^ig, dicpOTrovS'ig. (Conf. Bekk. Anecd. p. 1310.). The following are paroxytone: x a ^' Stg, oicXdSig, (}>vydc)ig, sxdBig, TrrcucdSig, fiLydSig, KpytydSig, d/uidStg. Only oitcaSig, d/uLvSig, and dXXvBig are proparoxytone. (Conf. Bekk. Anecd. p. 1310. 1317.) Note. — "AjuvSig and dXXvSig are of iEolic accentuation. Conf. Eustath. II. p. 732. 30. Schol. Venet. II. IX. 6. XX. 114. Those in avBig are paroxytone: dypavdi g, xa/ubavdig, Bekk. Anecd. p. 1310. Those in pig, vig, rig, (pig, \ l G are ° x ytone : d/uKpiKeXsiuivig, 7rafnrr)dovig, zjKOLTig, Xucpifyig, ai/rovi^C' Bekk. Anecd. p. 1319. IlipvTig, Doric for -rripvai, is proparoxytone, and avrig properis- pome. Those in aicig are paroxytone : TroXXdictg, StKaiag* 4. Those in og are oxytone : tvrog, ItcTog, UKog (properly par- ticiple). Ildpog, fip-og, rr\fiog, and ivay\og are barytone. (Conf. Apollon. de adv. p. 595.) 5. Those in vg are oxytone, except the perispome dXXvg and the barytone dvTticpvg. See Bekk. Anecd. p. 1316. jS. — Those in ? are oxytone : dva/ni^, djULirsrl^ djuLvZ,, evpd%, juiovvd^, dirpiZ, oSa$, dicXdli, i,Se. — These adverbs are the oldest forms of a case, which in the infancy of the language re- presented the idea both of the genitive and dative. They are ac- cented according to the following laws : 1. when the syllable preceding the termination (Si, i, &e) is short by nature they are all paroxytone : 7TTv6(pi, la^apocpi, v^vtocpLv (Mosch. IV. 78. from vt)Svlov ; not vr)dvio(j)iv), /ultjicoSev (from prjKog), dypoSi, ov- pavoSsv, rpi^o^Ev, irarpo^fEv, Kvirpo^Ev, dyyo^i, lyyvSev, X"/^" $ev, TiSpavroSEv, (puiyovvToSsv ; 2. when the syllable preceding the termination is long they are properispome, if the nomi- native of the original word itself was accented on a final syllable long by nature : the rest, whose original word was barytone in the nominative, are proparoxytone : dyopr\^Ev (dyo- pr'l), dp^r\^Ev (dp-)({]), rjuJSi {r}b)g) i KpiwSev (Kpuo, Steph. B. Conf. Schol. Aristoph. Av. 645.), xajtm^ (^afiat), Hv&wSev (Steph. B.), 'AAw7TEK:r}S'£V (AXtoTTEKJf) ', bllt £(i)S"£V (£(*>q) } GLTTV^EV ((JLTTm}), AviciaSev {AvKia), kripw^fev (JETEpog),"Acncpr}$Ev ("AcrKjOrj), 'Ava/aua- Sev ('Avajcata), 'AjULa^avrdaSav ( r A/xa?avraa, Steph. B.), Movvv- ^ia^Ev (Movvv^ia), Alyi\ia$£. Only o'/k:o3"£v, aAXo3"£v, 7ravro3"£v, ekclgtoSev, ektoSev, ivdo&Ev, diroTTpoSEv, together with their forms in §i and i, are proparoxytone. In like manner some, which have a form still extant with a long penultimate : diro^Ev (aVw- 3"£v), irpoaao^fEv (7rpo<7cra>S'£v), 07rt3"£v (ottkj&ev), ekoSev (ekckjSev), civekclSev, ayKa^Ev. In iEsch. Eum. 80. ay/caS^v, if it comes from ayicdg, appears to be the proper reading. (Blomf. iEsch. Ag. 3.). Note 1. — Instead of xcljulclSev it is probably better to read Xajti6%Ev (Aristoph. Vesp. 249.). Conf. Apollon. de adv. p. 600. On those which have both t}§ev and oSev, see Apollon. de adv. p. 602. Thus rapyrjrrfjSfv (TapyriTTog, Steph. Byz.), 'Itcapio%Ev (iKapla, Steph. Byz.), UXaraio^av (TlXdraia, Steph. G 2 84 GREEK ACCENTUATION. B-), n vXaioSsv (II v\ai, Steph. B.), QspaioStv (Qspai, Pseudo- Orph.). KoXivvriStv is correctly formed with rj, even if it were not derived from KoXwvai (Conf. Trmc. I. 131. Schol. Aristoph. Ran. 470.). For in Phavor. p. 1112. 20. we find also KpirjSsv. Note 2. — Instead of iravro^zv some old grammarians ac- cented TravToSzv. Conf. Apollon. de adv. p. 605. 3. Genitive Adverbs.— They are all accented according to the general laws; oxytone nominatives mostly give perispome genitives; hereto belong nov, ov (ottov on the contrary is par- oxytone), firjdajuLov^ 7ro\\axov, dirapyriQ, £$s$*?C> &>nQ ; but par- oxytone nominatives give paroxytone genitives, as l^aicpvrjg {lZ,a.7rivYiQ ; al(pvr}, arrivr), old substantive forms), l^ar/e, wpovpyov (irpb tpyov), ica%6\ov, dvrnripag (Conf. Schol. Thuc. 1. 100.). Note. — According to this law, the adverbs ektto^wv and zjunroStov, ought properly to be written eWoSwv e/unroSwv (ellip- tically for Ik 7rociov KwAu^ur?, or the like) ; but their perfectly adverbial use has changed the accent. 4. Dative Adverbs. — These comprise, in the first place, all adverbs in oi, which are formed from those in $1 and &i, by rejecting the aspirates (j> and $. They conform therefore to the accentuation of those adverbs, and contract the o and i of 6Si into ol, but of o§i into oi. Hence they are always perispome, when the equivalent adverbs in 6%i ought to be paroxytone, according to 2. : tteSoI (tteSoSi. See, however, Bekk. Anecd. p. 945. where tteSoi stands. Conf. Lobeck. Phryn. p. 648.; 7te§oi and fivxoi would be contrary to analogy) : S^rjrroT, 'A$/zo- vol, TapyriTTOif UvSoT, 'IcrSyioT, Meyapot, EvravSot fppearroT, tppsappol, ^VTraXrjTTOL, SoimoT, YlpofiaXivSolL, Tt3"pavroT, Qopi- koX, KopvdaWot, 'Ava^XucrroT, Tzavraypl, EKa^Ta^oT, apfioX, not (but o7roi), AlyiXiot (AlyiX'ia), 'I/captoT, ^TEipiot (Sre/pm). Those only, whose forms in o^t and oSe are not paroxytone, remain barytone : oIkol (oikov£ o?ko$£i/), e vSoi (evBoSev), e%oi (Apollon. de adv. p. 610.). Yet the Syracusans accented the two last IvSoT, l%ol. (Conf. Theodos. Gramm. p. 232.). UeZol, which Blomfield iEsch. Prom. 280. quotes from Thucydides II. 94., is there not an adverb, but an adjective tteZoL Note.— Apollon. de adv. p. 588. 27. 610. 31. adduces from GREEK ACCENTUATION. 85 Alcseus juIggoi, which, according to this rule, ought to be litacroL ; but he himself correctly observes the reason of that accentuation in the iEolic dialect of the poet. The Schol. Aristoph. Av. 57. says, that Symmachus and Didymus ac- cented iiroTToi instead of hroiroi. Conf. Schol. iEsch. Pers. 550. Probably, however, this word does not fall under this class. Moreover, all adverbs in gi, derived from datives plural, be- long hereto, and are accented according to the general laws, i. e. they retain the accent on that syllable, which possessed it in the nominative; I. First declension; Svpaai, wpaai (S. Herm. epit. doctr. met. p. XX.), 'OXvp,7ridGiv (OXv/unria, Aristoph. Lys. 1131.), Qr)j3r}(TL (Qrjfiri), Movvv^iaat (Movvv^ia), f A/x^)trpo7rr]crtv, AeioXeickti (not AeksXsicigi), 'EjcaXrjcri (Steph. Byz.), Qopcuri (Qopai), HXwSelckti, 'ETritiKidrim, Al^ijjvrjGt (Ai^wv/j), S^tvSa- Xtjgl (^evSaXrj), KeQaXriGi, 'AypvXriGt (AypvXr) *), 'Ept^mcriv ( Epe-^yiaoriv ?), UpaGirjGi or Upacrtacri (Upaaiai) , TlXaraiaaL (nXarami), QXvricn (r}yOVVTlGl. Note. — The rule for these adverbs in gi, which are so often falsely accented, occurs in the Scholiast on Aristoph. Vesp. 1382. The Scholiast's opinion is clear from the words : yiverm yap to juev dirb tov 'OXv/i7ria ^OXv/unrlaGi, to &e dirb tov 'OXvfjLiriag 'OXvfnriam. Comp. Phavorin. under 'OXu/x- tticmtl' 7rp07rapo%vv6fj.evov XiyzTai tteoX tottov' lav irtpX irpayfia- toq ig drjXovaa tj Xk%ig olov wg& Xiyot Tig Sl/ca 'OXv/unriaGiv l(j>^rig iviK7)v Sid tov oSev. Conf. Steph. B. v. 'AxapvriSev, v. AetciXzta. The passage in Aristophanes, how- ever, and the nature t)f the thing shew that the proper - 1 This is the usual accentuation ; but, if it ought properly to be 'AypavXij (from "AypavXog; Conf. Steph. B.), 'AypvXijci is to be preferred. 86 GREEK ACCENTUATION. ispoming of 'OXvpiriam is altogether inadmissible. 'OXv/unriaat, therefore, is : at Olympia, of the place, 'OXvjulttickti : in the Olympic games. See Aristot. Polit. p. 342. Hernsterh. ad Luc. T. I. p. 106. The adverbs in iaiv (Steph. Byz.) are remarkable for their formation and accent, and might appear to represent the oldest form of the dative plural of the third declension, wherein i before vyaSe. GREEK ACCENTUATION. 87 the preceding syllable is long by nature, crde changes into Ze ; for Z consists of o-S, not of Sop, which would be a succession of mutes quite unknown to the Greek, every T sound being dropped before or: 'A^vaZe (A^rjvag Be), 'OXv/unriaZe ('OXvfnrlag Be), epaZe (epacrBe, Theocr. Id. 6. 146.), QopaZe (Qopai), ^iKapiaZe, NlovvvyiaZe, AeiceXeiaZe (AeiceXeiag de), TlXaraiaZe (UXaraiaf), QXvaZe (QXvai), ya\iaZe (better than \ajnaZe ; for an old no- minative plural would give x"! 11 "? * n the accusative, which joined with Be forms yaixaZe, not xafiaZe. S. Apollon. de adv. p. 608. Arcad. p. 183. 14.). Note. — MeraZe (S. Bekker. Anecd. p. 945.) or fieraZe (so Phavor. p. 738. 19.) is of peculiar formation. In no case can it be derived, as Phavorinus supposes, immediately from juera; it stands for fiecracrBe (comp. the Homeric jueraoo-cu) or something similar. Conf. Herodian. irepl juov. Xi%. p. 46. The enclitic Be, however, is not only joined to accusatives but also to some genitives, without destroying thereby the ac- cusative relation. For to these genitives an accusative must be supplied. Thus, 'A'iBoaBe (namely, "AiBog Btojua). Hereto belong also the following forms : QpnoZ^ (not QpiwZe, Thuc. I. 114. II. 21. Conf. Steph. Byz. v. Qpia), KpuSZe (Steph. B. v. KpitLa. So is it to be read, and not Kpiwa, for KpuSa, viz. X'^j° a > is fern, of the adj. Kpiwog. S. Phavorin. p. 1113. 2.). From the nominative Kpiw and Opidj is formed the old genitive Kptwg and Opiwg (conf. Bekker. Anecd. p. 1201), which joined with Be, forms KpicvZe and 0jOta>£e. Also x a M«£ £ ( so ^Elius Diony- sius in Phavor. s. v.) might in this way, if necessary, be defended as an original formation from the Doric genitive xaimg. S. Draco, p. 41. Also, the otherwise remarkable forms 'AXySevBe (Steph. Byz. v. "AXrjSev) and evSevBe (properly EvfovSe; see below) admit of similar explanation, §ev being originally a termina- tion of the genitive, as in e/meSev, veSev, eSev, &c. Note 1. — In Hesiod. Scut. 480. Be is also appended to the proper dative adverb HvSot, probably in conformity with the forms oiroi, trot, which have invariably the accusative sense ; or it must be changed into Uv^^Be. » Note 2. — Accentuations like 'ApyoaBe, evSaBe, iv&evSe, ori- 88 GREEK ACCENTUATION. ginated with those grammarians who accented the last syllable of a trochaic word, when followed by an enclitic (§. 47. III. Note). But twikciSe from rriviica is contrary to analogy, as togogSe from roaog, while oikciSe instead of okaSt arises from an opposite error. b. Adverbs in ce follow those in $£, from which they appear to be formed. Hence kvkXove, because kvk\6%e ; but ttclvtoge, a\Ao<7£, because navToSe, clWoSe ; in like manner orroripwdE, because biroTipw^E ; trepuxjE because hipw^ev, c. To accusative adverbs belong also forms such as apx^v, aKTjv, 7rapaxpr}[ia, fcaro7nv, fXEToirtv (kcit ottiv, jaet ottlv), ugotuv (also e£o7nv, like ejuittoSwv), liriiTav^ avoTrala (in Homer better than dvoiraia, according to the analogy of o/uLolog, spri/nog, yeXolog, TpoTTalov), i]pEjua formed from EprifJ.a), E7rirrj^EQ y Sto, jurjSajua (Theocr. Epigr. 8. 3.) Conf. Jacobs, Anthol. Pal. p. 914. Note. — The accentuation E-rriT^Eg rests solely upon an erroneous derivation from an adjective ETnrrjS/je, which either never existed or is altogether of very late occurrence. The word must be derived from etti and tijSeq (sufficing for the whole year, hence sufficient); consequently could only be accented ettlt^eq or £7rtrfi§£c, but not ETTiTr)$Eg. 'EirirriSEg is analogous to E-rravayKEg, whose masculine and feminine are likewise no longer extant. Particles. §. 37. Comprehensive rules cannot here be given : most monosyl- lables are oxytone as ju?'j, vat, /cat, $ai; others, particularly interrogatives, are perispome : fxwv, irrj, 7ro7, irov, ttwq ; add to these vvv and ovv. On enclitics see §. 48. 1. On the particle ovkow, which changes its accent with a change of signification, the following must be observed: 1. ovkow is paroxytone (ovk ovv) when it signifies therefore not or certainly not, where the emphasis necessarily lies on the nega- tion. So also in interrogation, where it corresponds to the Latin nonne : ovkow jeXioq yi$kttoq eiq ex^qovq jeXuv ; here the heightened tone, which in itself is proper to interrogation, GREEK ACCENTUATION. 89 renders this accentuation necessary (comp. §. 30. 1 — 2.). 2. Ouk- ovv is perispome, the emphasis lying on ovv, when it signifies therefore, ergo : ovkovv, otclv Srj iirj cr^ivu), TrtTravcrofiai. 2. "Apa is paroxytone when it corresponds to our but, there/ore, and like the Latin atqui either confirms or denies a preceding- proposition, as a consequence ; on the contrary, apa is pro- perispome, when it corresponds in interrogation to the Latin num. 3. ij signifies 1. either, or; 2. than, after a comparative: ?j, 1. truly, certainly; 2. num. It must be distinguished from r\ ffiMr). 4. ore always signifies when as a conjunction ; but brk some- times; hence qt\ \i\v, qt\ Si, 5. ofiwg, nevertheless; 6/miog (ojulov) at the same time. Interjections. §.38. Here also no comprehensive rule can be laid down. Those terminating in a long vowel are mostly perispome : (j>ev, w (on the contrary, without the vocative of a noun w), fXeXtu, ototol, atjSot, lav, KiKKaflav ; those ending in a consonant are mostly oxytone : j3ctj3ata£, TOporiyZ. Yet irawai, iov (as an ejaculation of sorrow), iSov are always oxytone, also IwoiroL S. Schol. Aristoph. Av. 227. Iov (as an ejaculation of joy). Conf. Schol. Aristoph. Pac. 317. al and 01 are alike good. ^Numerals. §. 39. As these also admit of no general rule, but mostly discover their accent by the derivation of the individual words, according to the rules above given, we shall here notice merely a few peculiarities: in elg, fiia, ev, the genitive and dative feminine are not accented /ulag and fxia, as the rule would require, but juiag (Ion. ii)c) and fiia, wherein the unorganic combination of this word with ovSi or firjdi produces no change of the accent, /*»}§£- 90 GREEK ACCENTUATION. jume, fjL-ndefiia, although the composition of /xrjSe with tig banishes the circumflex: [iridsig, ovdug, gen. and dat. plur. ovSivwv ovSlm. The accentuation fiia fiiag may be thus explained: fiia ought originally to be oxytone in the nominative, for log, II. VI. 422. is oxytone; but oxytones of the first declension in a have a always long; hence as fxia is always a pyrrhic ( ww ), it conse- quently cannot be oxytone in the nominative. On the contrary, the genitive and dative, wherein the a appears as long, are accented, as if the nom. and accus. were really oxytone. In like manner, the gen. dual, and plural of $vo and a//0w forms not Suotv, afxcj)OLv, but, like monosyllables of the third declension, dvoXv, ajUL^oXv, &c. 'Evvia (comp. evr) teal via) retains the accent on the unchanged word, agreeably to its derivation, although, having the quality of a neuter plural, it is short in the last syllable. Mvpiot signifies ten thousand; but when it stands as a definite number for an indefinite multitude, it is distinguished by the accent: fivpioi; hence ol javpioi "EXXriveg, the ten thousand Greeks ; rCov 'EWrjvtov fivptoi ijcrav, there was an immense mul- titude of Greeks, Note. — It would almost appear, that this distinction is a mere invention of grammarians ; for why do the Greeks re- cognise no distinction between x* Al0t (thousand) and x* At ' ot (very many)? So Aristot. Polit. II. 1. 11. Schn. Conf. the Scholiast on Aristoph. Vesp. 727. Herodian (in Phavor. p. 1281. 25.) says positively that fivpioi is the only correct ac- centuation in both significations. 1. All ordinal numbers in rog are barytone ; all in oro^ oxy- tone. Only the interrogative woaTog forms an exception ; 7rpu>- TKTTog is a superlative form. 2. To numeral ideas belong also the forms atrXoog (cnrXovg), SnrXoog (diirXovg), which are accented differently in order to be distinguished from adjectives compounded with 7r\6og (irXovg), as evnXoog, evirXovg. All other numeral ideas not having the termination -irXoog retain the natural accentuation : oydoog. 3. When several numbers are combined by Kai, the whole combined word draws its accent as near to icai as possible. If they be formed without Km, the accentuation follows the old law GREEK ACCENTUATION. 91 in parathetic compounds (§. 41.) : namely, the last number re- tains its accent unchanged : dicoaiiZi, SeiccnrivTs. 4. Numeral adverbs in ant are always paroxytone. S. §. 35. 4. Pronouns. §. 40. 1. Pronoun adjectives of more than one syllable are all bary- tone : aXXog, Ketvog, iroaog, Trotog, ocrog, olog, roaog, rolog, ovrog, tTEpog, 6 Suva, erepotog, kicaTEpog, eicacFTog. Only avrog, ifxog, and the indefinites Troaog, Trotog are oxytone. Note. — A syllabic prefix does not change the accentuation : KEivog EKEivog, ovrog roiovrog, oarog oTroaog, Trotog oTrotog, Tn\- XiKog oTniXiicog. Of the latter it must be remarked, that pro- perly the article 6 only is prefixed, which is here used re- latively. 2. The oblique cases of some pronouns are accented arbitrarily by the Greeks. From rifiztg, vjxug, the Attics, according to their simple rule, formed r\fi£)v, 77/xTv, yfiag, v/jlCjv, v/uuv, vjuag. The poets, on the contrary, to whom the short final syllable must have been very acceptable, frequently availed themselves in these cases of the iEolic accentuation TJfjieg (afifieg), rj/mtv {appi), and rjfiag {afifit), where, by the recession of the accent a final syllable in itself long, could be somewhat shortened to the voice. For the proper iEolic accentuation was r\tuv and vjilv. On the other hand, the Attic poets, when the last syllable was to be used short, left the accent on the syllable which originally pos- sessed it, and merely changed the circumflex into an acute : rjjuiiv, vjilv. Note. — On y]jjlv, fywv, and r\fiiv see Schol. Venet. II. I. 147. ; vwi and a^CSi, when shortened into vw and a retained the old accentua- tion, while the Spartans, again, said eytoya. If ye be separated from the pronoun in writing, the accent remains on the last syllable of the pronoun : eyco ye, e/nol ye, efie ye. Note. — The accentuation of these pronouns is exactly si- milar to that of the Ionic eirei re and eireira. So eyu) ye and eywya. "Eywye cannot be considered as a relic of the JEolic accentuation ; for the iEolians accented eywv. S. Phavorin. p. 656. 53. 6. Pronouns compounded of rig and a negative (jmri and ov), as the two words are not organically combined, take the accent on the defining negative : ovrig, fi{)Tig. 7. The pronoun nag in composition draws the accent upon the word which enlarges the sense : nag, airag, avfitrag, Trpoirav. Apollon. de adv. Of synthetic (organic) and parathetic funorganicj combinations. §• 41. Two words are combined synthetically or organically into one, when they are so united by connective vowels that the original termination of at least one of them disappears. These organic combinations constitute one of the greatest beauties of the Greek language, which to us is entirely unknown, our com- positions being invariably formed without such connective GREEK ACCENTUATION. 93 vowels. Thus with the Greeks, e. g. ^qvgot^vktoq is a syn- thetic (organic) combination, because the original form of the first word (xpvaog) is lost in the combination : on the contrary with us, e. g. the word goldwrought, in which the unchanged word gold is joined to the unchanged word wrought, forms a parathetic or unorganic combination. 1. The Greeks have likewise a great many of the latter kind, which grammarians designated by a vfyiv — ^ — (Kwoaovpa). With respect to the accent, as the two words are only joined to and not incorporated with each other, the law in earlier times was to leave to the latter word its own accentuation, while that of the former was dropped in order to form at least for the eye the appearance of one word : Bovpi-icXtiTog, Kvvog-ovpa, vr\vira, wfi dwoTafivo- fxevov, a SdX ovdi, &c. we ought to write and speak Xsvk aXcpLTa, wfi awoTafivoiuLevov, a SslX ovdi. For in pronouncing the syllables Xwk, wfx, and SsiX' the voice must tarry upon them so as to render the elision audible ; consequently they must be pronounced in the same manner as if they were cir- cumflexed. The surest evidence of this may be drawn from the well-known story respecting the actor Hegelochus, who, in pro- nouncing the verse of Euripides (Or. 273.) Ik kvjulcltwv yap avSig av yaXriv 6ou, caused the aspiration of o in oaio to be heard, so that it sounded as if he had said : yaArjv 6pw. The Athenians, however, would not have been able to hear yaXrjv 6qu) if he had pronounced yaXfiv 6pw, but might do so, if he pronounced yaXriv bow and caused them to hear the aspiration. 96 GREEK ACCENTUATION. Crasis. §. 44. I. According to §. 12. the circumflex can only arise, when the first of the contracted syllables had the acute, the se- cond the grave. From this the rule would follow that a crasis could never receive the circumflex unless the principal word itself already possessed it, because there are only two cases of crasis, namely, either the first word is accented or it is not (§. 47.) ; but in each case the second will be accented. If the first be the case, as in ra aXXa, the crasis raWa will not give this form of the circumflex a, as it would require the second syllable to be unaccented. If the second be the case, as in ol clXXoi, the form of accentuation becomes exactly the reverse v, which could not give a crasis wXXot, but at most &Xkoi, or best aXXoL. Nevertheless, the best manuscripts of the ancient authors have : rdXXa, toXXoi, Tovpyov, T&pyog (to "Apyog), Tovvap (to ovap), Tovpog (to opog, if from the Ionic ovpog it would be right also according to the above law), tov^ov, although according to the law they should be accented raXXa, aXXoi, Tovpyov, Tovipov, Tapyog, Touvap, Tovpog like Ktoipov (Aristoph. Vesp. 320.), S-w7rXa. The reason of this lies in the different view taken by grammarians of the nature of crasis. Some held it to be a real syntactical synthesis, and therefore rightly wrote Twpyog, rovp- yov, &c„ according to §. 11. II. 2.; others, on the contrary, did not regard it as a proper composition or organic synthesis, con- sequently they gave to the words combined by crasis the same accentuation which the second word possessed previously to its combination with the other. Hence, according to the view of the latter the following would be correctly accented : kcito., TaSXa, eycoSa, ly^fiai, Kyire, and iccpvog from kcu uto., to, a&\a, !ya> olSa, tya) olfiai, kol bitts and koX olvog. Besides TavSov, Tcipya, kclti, \o.fia, wpvsg, \waoi, x/'Wa from tol evSov, to. spya, kol 'in, kol ana, ol 6pv£g, /cat oaoi, kcu ova. On the contrary, according to the view of the former, every crasis of this kind with a long pe- nultimate ought to be properispome. And this view is most conformable to the analogy of the Greek language. Conf. Elmsl. ad Med. 888. Theodos. p. 224. GREEK ACCENTUATION. 97 Note. — That a crasis, like x^orfe (koX ocrng) cannot be pro- perispome is evident, because ootiq is a paraihetic composition. II. When the accented short syllable of a word could not be united into a proper crasis with the next long one of a preceding word, a kind of cenotaph of the accent, frequently adopted in the older editions, but admitting of no justification, was to drop en- tirely the accented short syllable, and to leave only its breathing and accent standing in its place, e. g. rj "voia (for r) avoia), £70* "raatrov (for IVcktotov), raWoTpia firi "x £iv (f° r f 1 ^! ^X £lv )' How these examples are to be pronounced, one cannot easily comprehend, it being impossible to cause an accent to be heard without the existence of a syllable upon which to place it In such cases, therefore, either the words are written out in full, e. g. ra aXXorpia firj ex £lv > or the crasis formally expressed, as e. g. firt\£iv, ibvSpioirs, cywVao-o-ov, wva% *). It would be well, to write tovSpwwE, wvaZ, instead of ibvSpwTre, iova$i. Proper Anastrophe. §. 45. a. A peculiarity of the Greek poets, which some also of the older Roman ones have imitated, consists in sometimes putting prepo- sitions behind the substantive to which they belong. This is attended with what is called the anastrophe of the accent, i. e. its recession from the last and otherwise accented syllable of these prepositions to the first, in order to indicate that the preposi- tions belong not to the following but to the preceding word ; thus 3"£wv airo for airo S"£wv, 'ISa/crj tvi for ev\ 'iSa/crj, 'AAjavoco wapa for izapa 'AAiavow. If these prepositions have lost their accented last syllable by elision, it is not usual in that case to apply to them the anastrophe of the accent, although no valid reason can be assigned for this. As little reason can be con- ceived for the law laid down by some grammarians, that the * To preserve consistency, one might infer a catastrophe of the accent, and lay down a rule the reverse of that which ohtains in anastrophe, making the accent advance instead of receding, e. g. kywraooov. H 98 GREEK ACCENTUATION. prepositions ava and Sid generally, when they stand after their noun, must not experience anastrophe. Note 1. — According to Aristarchus, when a preposition stands between two substantives belonging to one another, of which one is a proper name, the other an appellative, its accent is determined by the proper name ; consequently Sav- Sov a.7ro divrievTog, but Trora/uLOv cnro SeAAt^vtoc ; according to Ptolemy it was determined by the appellative, and according to Apollonius and Herodian the preposition was anastrophised in each case, whether standing before the proper name or the appellative. And this is also the most rational. Eustath. ad II. p. 369. Schol. Venet. II. II. 346. Etym. M. v. 'Atto, p. 123. 30. M o'/k^, p. 342. 8. Apollon. Synt. p. 303. sq. Note 2. — 'Ava and did are said not to be anastrophised, in order to avoid any confusion with Am and ava (vocative of ava% or for dvdarriSi). Note 3. — When prepositions are separated by tmesis from the verb to which they belong, some grammarians are wont to leave them unaccented, e. g. irpiv y* airo irarpX i\ig do/uevat, because, properly, it ought to be aVoSojuevcu ; see Villois. Anecd. gr. II. p. 130. Note 4. — Aristophanes of Byzantium oxytoned prepositions even in iEolic writers, for the sake of rendering them capable of anastrophe. Apollon. Dysc. Synt. p. 309. Bekk. b. Prepositions of three mora do not draw back their accent to the first syllable, when they refer to a preceding substantive. To these belong djx^i, avri, kicTog, and x w 9 1 ^j an( ^ the poetically lengthened airai, viral, TrpoH (iropri), &c. ; hence awv riKvoJv viral (Eur. El. 1187.), yng vTrai (not virai), JEsch. Eum. 419. c. A second case in which the above-mentioned prepositions draw back their accent to the first syllable occurs, when they stand independently in the place of a verb, e. g. ndpa for ird- pzcrTi, vtto for vttegti, wipi for 7T£pt€(Trt, diro for aVccm, tvi for tveari, &c. GREEK ACCENTUATION. 99 UNACCENTED WORDS. §. 46. Proclitics. There are in Greek, as in other languages, words so unim- portant of themselves that they have no accent of their own, but are associated by the speaker with the really accented word to which they belong, in the same way as if the two formed one word. In Greek, however, a distinction is observed in such words : 1. those which stand before, and 2. those which stand after the word that they refer to. The former of these unaccented words are called proclitics, and are not furnished by the Greeks with a sign of accent ; the others are called enclitics. They differ from each other merely by position ; for e. g. rot belongs to both in Toiyaproi, the first roi being proclitic, the second enclitic. The Greek article 6, 17, 01, and al is in this way proclitic, so that e. g. instead of 6 iraTT}p one should conceive oTrarrip to be written and pronounced *• Here it must be observed, however, that o, like 7], 01, di, immediately receives its accent, when it is used in Homer, as these latter in other authors, in the sense of a relative pronoun. In like manner the conjunctions el (also al) and wc (as, that) are of themselves unaccented. The latter, however, in two cases receives an accent, 1. when it stands for ovTtog (so), e. g. u>g d-mov, (where it would be better peris- pome cog), and 2. when in the signification as it stands after the word to which it refers, e. g. ot Se Xvkoi &>g r\piraZov for r\piraZ,ov cl>g Xvkoi. To proclitics belong also the prepositions Ik (IS), dg (kg, cog), Iv {dv, but not ivi), and the negative oh, ovk (oi>x)? when it stands before the word which it negatives ; if it stands after, it then receives, like cog, its independent accent : ol julv avrb eno'i- rir)fjii, in the present of the indicative; the second person of elfi'i, eiQ f is enclitic (Conf. Herodian. GREEK ACCENTUATION. 101 ap. Bekker. Anecd. p. 1144.), but a (S. Joh. Charax ap. Bekk. p. 1151. Anecd.) and fig (Arcad. p. 142. 8.) never. ?j/xi and its remaining persons retain the accent, when they are included between two interpunctions, e. g. 'AXrjSig tort, $r\ai. Note, — Also the apocope Qh from 0iju)iv, (Hpewv, o-tyzdg, (j(f>l (o-(j)iv), acpk, can all be used enclitically ; but of these the following only can in definite cases be used also as orthotone (independently accented) : aev (ako, gov), vol, ai, sv, ol, e'3"£v, a<$>i, £ jiiv. 4. The indefinite particles wwg, iroi, ny, irov, iro^i, iroSiv, irori, TTw t re, Sfiv, yi, /el (k(v), vv {vvv), Trip, pd, which in writing are separated from, and SI, &( ($(v), which in writing are united with the word to which they belong : e. g. SlXovri nep and lvSd$£, ode, roiogde. Note. — When these particles appear as interrogative, they are accented independently. In like manner vvv, if it be a Xpoviicbv hrippvfia, and have an emphasis upon it, is peris- pome ; vvv, as enclitic, is equivalent to S?j. Conf. Schol. Aristoph. Plut. 41-1. 5. Also the otherwise invariably oxytone avrog is considered by grammarians in one passage (II. XII. 204. Koipe yap avrov z\ovra) as enclitic, because it there stands without emphasis. Apollon. de pronom. p. 301. C. 5. In Apoll. p. 337. C. 3. it is shewn that this was the accentuation prior to the time of Apollonius. But Trypho and Apollonius disapproved of it. See the Syntaxis of the latter. For enclitic words we must further observe the following ge- neral rules, which properly, however, may all be explained from the general rule laid down above. I. Long syllables in enclitics obtain as short for accentuation, because so little emphasis is laid upon these words that the dis- course passes quickly over them. S. §. 5. 3. Thus wvrivwv. II. If enclitics follow an oxytone, it takes the acute instead of the grave accent common in the middle of discourse, because the enclitic is now considered as part of the preceding word : dya&og tern, (properly dyaSoaeGTi). III. Two syllables standing immediately next each other in the same word cannot be accented. If, therefore, monosyllabic GREEK ACCENTUATION. 103 enclitics follow a paroxytone, this paroxytone retains only its old accent : aXXot ye (properly aWoiye), aWot nag, tva azag, (jicn, if so accented, would be raised to inde- pendent words. Dissyllabic enclitics, therefore, in the given case are accented on the termination, contrary to the rule of accentuation in independent words. IV. If enclitics follow a proparoxytone, its last syllable, upon grounds easy to be understood (s. §§. 5. and p. 115.), is oxytoned anew. Also upon grounds explained in §. 11. a properispome is here equivalent in accentuation to a proparoxytone ; hence crw/xa juou (properly (toojuo. fxov). V. If enclitics of more than one syllable, or long by nature, follow a perispome, they ought properly to retain their peculiar accent; but it is usual in this case to regard the perispome as equivalent merely to an oxytone : hence they do not receive back their accent, e. g. iog 1 nere vv an( ^ <7£ are j°i ne d to the now oxy tone ij : r? vv ae; but oi, as the third syllable of n vv ' 'Aywv (ayovrog), part. pr. of ayu) ; aywv (dyuvog), contest. "A$e\ aicfjirivog, vr\pog, foam. 'A^ptToc, in Homer ; ay^s iog y with the Antics. Schol. Venet. 2. 269. Bcuog, a name ; fiaiog, small ; ficuov, to kXciSov roO ) ; l%atpu (from l^aip(oj). 'E$av£^60i, common accentuation ; lZav£\pioi, Attic. Trypho in Ammonius. 'E^mo-iv, from i^trjjUi ; ifyacnv, from f^a/xt. "E7raivoc, praise ; liraivog, celebrated. 'E^ap^a, a name ; iirap\ia, eparchy. 'Epr/juoc, Homeric and old Attic ; eprj/mog, common accentuation. 'Eptv£oc? wild fig-tree ; fpivfoc, woolly. 'EpixaToc ; new Attic, Epfxaiog. 'EroL/uiog, Homeric and old Attic accentuation; zroifiog, new Attic. GREEK ACCENTUATION. 109 "Eroc (ro) r year; croc, adverb. EvavSrig, a man's name ; evavSrig, adj. EvwdSrjg, a name; svirei^fig, adj. Ewo-I ]3wv, a name ; Evaej^iov, part. Eucr^lvrjc, a name ; fixrS^vrie, adj. Eurux ta > a name ; zvtvxicl, subst. "Ex$*pa, enmity; £X^p«? f em - of the adj. t^poe- Zany, life : £0*17, to Ittclvu) tov piXiTog kol yaXaicTog. Eust. p. 906. 52. Zwov, animal ; £, a name ; kX&Sw, I spin. KXf/poc, lot ; tcXripog, sorte electus. Joh, Phil. Kolvog, a name ; Koivog, common. Eust. p. 906. KofjLidri, subst. ; Ko/xiSr), adv. K6[A7rog % pride ; KO/nroe, proud. Kovig, dust ; icovig, nit. Ammonius. Kopiovog (mountain) ; Kopwvog, crooked. Kovprireg, Curetes ; Kovprirzg, young people. Eust. p. 771. KovpiKog, the name of a place ; KovpiKog, tonsorius. Joh. Phil. GREEK ACCENTUATION. Ill KpjJcj Cretan; Kprig (for icpiag), flesh. Kplvtov, judicans ; Kptvuv, liliarium. Kplog, a man's name ; Kpiog, ram. Aristarchus, however, writes both oxytone. Etym. Gud. p. 346. KpoTwv, a town ; /cporaiv, tick. Steph. Byz. v. AIctojv; Kporwv, particip. KvkIu), I mix ; kvke to, ace. of kvkeivv. Kvpiog, a place in Macedonia ; Kvpiog, lord. J. P. KvpTog, weel ; Kvprog, crooked. Eust. p. 907. ^vtyog, a town ; Kvcf>6g f hump-backed. J. P. Kv Aafis, common accentuation ; Xaj3l, Attic. Aaj3rj, pretext ; Aaj3r), handle. Aafipog, abundans; Xafipog, vehemens. J. Ph. Aafila, the name of a town ; Aafiia, the monster Lamia. Adfiirpa, a town ; Xafiirpa, fern, of Xa/unrpog. Aaog, genit. of Xag, stone ; Xaog, people. Aapog, osprey ; Xapog, a, 6v, pleasing. AIktov, promontory ; Xetcrov, verb. adj. Aiwag (to), rock ; Xc7rac (-»?), limpet. A£v/o7, subst. ; Xevkyi, fern. adj. Asvkwv, a man's name ; Xsvkmv, part. Arivaiog, a man's name; Xrivciiog, adj. Aiyvg, Ligur ; Xiyvg, stridulus, Anrapa, an island ; Xnrapa, fern, adj . Aixavog, 6, index-finger ; Xixavog, 17, string of a harp. AovTpov, bathing-place ; Xovrpov, water for bathing. Avaiag, a man's name ; Avaiag, a woman's name. AwTog, a man's name ; Xwrog, lote-tree. Maicpov, a place; jucucpdv, neut. adj. MaXaicog, a man's name; fxaXctKog, adj. Eust. p. 1093. Mavrig, tree-frog ; jmavrig, prophet. MeSifivog, a name ; ^edifivog, a measure. Phavorin. Mficov, comparat. ; /auwv, part. MeXitivti, the name of a woman; /ueXitivyi, fern, gentile. MtiBiKr}, an herb ; fiij&icq, fern. adj. 112 GREEK ACCENTUATION. Mkjtjti], r\ afya fjicrovg' fiiai)Tt\, i), Kar^eprig irpbg crv. overlay. Trypho ap. Amnion. Movrf, subst., stay; juovrj, fern, adj., alone. Mo^rjpog, 6 ra. rjSri irovrjpog, juo^rjpoc, 6 eir'nrovog. Amnion. MvXXog, a name ; fivWog, strabo. Joh. Ph. Mvpioi, ten thousand ; jivpioi, very many. Mwpoe, old Attic ; /muipog, new Attic. Naov and vuov. See Schol. Apoll. Rh. I. 122. Neo'c, novate ; viog, novus. Nikwv, a man's name ; vacwv, particip. No/icuov, pascuale ; vofiaiov, legitimnm. J. Ph. NoVoc, law ; vopoc, canton. NvfjKpiog, adj. ; vv/LHpiog, subst. EavSrj, a woman's name; £ai/d?j,fem. adj. EavSog, a man's name; %av%6g, adj. Bsviicog, a man's name ; Zzviicog, adj. Eiviov, gen. pi. of ?£ vog ; %evu)v (6), guest-chamber. EvtTTig, Attic ; Zvarig, later and common accentuation. OIkol, houses ; olkol, at home. "Okvoc, subst.; okvoc, adj. "OAoe, whole ; 6\6g, ink. 'O^otoe, Homeric and old Attic ; 6'/xotoc, later accentuation. O/xwc, tamen ; bfiug, simul. "O-rnvTr-n (verb) ; ottwttt] (subst). Hermann in Bucol. ap. Schaef. Soph. p. IX. "OpSog, a name; opSog, adj. "Opjuoc, bay; opjuoc, ornament. Nevertheless the latter ac- centuation does not occur in any MS. ; the distinction belongs to Grammarians. Wolf. Anal. p. 469. "Opvn, night; opvri, adj. fem. of opvog. Phavor. p. 1328. 53. "Opog, mountain ; opog, 6, serum. Eust. p. 906. Ovkovv, igitur ; ovkovv, nonne. Ovpa, tail; ovpa (to), boundaries. Ovpog, favourable wind; ovpog, pit; ovpog, guard. "0 X o(, 6 X ot. Conf. Eust. p. 1519. 62. GREEK ACCENTUATION. 113 UatSta (??), play; iraiSia (to), boys. Haicjv, epith. of Apollo ; Haitjv, Paeonian ; liakov, Paeon ; na'uov (rog), striking. IlaXXac (Soc), Pallas ; IlaXXac (vtoq), a man's name. TLav, neut. of nag; liav, the god Pan. napSeviicr), a woman's name ; wapSeviKri, virgin. Ilapa, Trapecrrt ; napa, prepos. Hapdag, a serpent ; irapeiag, ace. pi. of irapua. TltSiov, field ; ir&iov, diminutive of iridov. Eust p. 255. IleiSb) (verb) ; ireiSw, suada. lldpwv, tranans ; irupuyv, tentans. Tlrj, interrogative ; ny, enclitic. H'uov, fat; ttlwv, aor. 2. part, of nivdj. JQXarayrj, rattle ; 7rXaray?7, rattling sound. H\d(i)v, comparat. of 7ro\vg ; TrXeuLv, year. TiXovriov, Pluto; ir\ovT(jjv, ditescens. nAuvo'e, washing-trough; wXvvog, washed. Schol. Aristoph. Plut. 1062. Tlotog, quails ? iroiog, quidam. IloXefxojv, a name ; ttoXcjuw v, particip. TloXtov, an herb; ttoXiov, gray (adj.). Tlovrjpog, 6 KaKorf^rjg' Trovripog, 6 hTrlwovog. Ammonius. Tlo(T£i$£ct)v (Ion. for Hocrtidbjv) ; irocsc&cJv, a month. IIorE, quando ; irori, aliquando. YIoTog, potus ; worog, potulentus. Tlpae'ia, the name of a town ; Trpavia, garden-bed. Upiojv, saw; wpiajv, saw-fish. Eustath. Hexsem. p. 19. Wpvfivri, subst. ; wpvfxvrj, fern. adj. Eustath. p. 547. Schol. Venet. V. 292. IlTv^rj, plicatio ; Trrv)(f), cojicavitas, Joh. Phil. Uvyfirj, boxing; Tivy/Jiy, closely. Joh. Phil. riuSw'v (17), the place Pytho ; Ilv^wv (6), the dragon, Ammon. TlvXaiog, a name ; TrvXalog, before the gate. Tlvppog, adj. ; Ilvppog, Pyrrhus. 'Pfv/j, file; pivn], shark. J. Ph. c P(7ri7, town-wall ; pnrri, blast of wind. Eust. p. 301. I 114 GREEK ACCENTUATION. 'PoSiog, Rhodian ; f Po$i6g, the name of a river. J. Ph. Comp. f Pd§wv, a man's name; poSiov, bed of roses. 'Pujuj3oc, the name of a river; pvpfiog, xoAiicde. Joh. Phil. Styo, imperat. of oryaw; o$pa, neutr. pi. of &(f>o§p6g. 2x«^°Cj adj., near; ^x^toe, a man's name. 2xoXt), leisure ; cxoX^, adv., quietly. Tapaog, a town ; rapaog, hurdle. Tevicpog, a name ; TevKpog, Trojan. Joh. Phil. Ti/di!)v, a name ; rt/majv, part. Tlveg, who ? rivig, indef. encl. Td/ioc, section of a book ; ro/iog, cutting. Ammonius. Tpkrsg £7rt yjpovov, rpizTzg £7ri fiXtKiag. Ammonius. Tptrocj the name of a river ; rpirog, tlrird. Draco, p. 87. Tp'irwv, a name ; rpirwv, part, of rpiroo). Tpoiralov, old Attic ; rpoiraiov, later accentuation. GREEK ACCENTUATION. 115 Tpoirog, manner; tqottoq ifxag, cua, a town ; rig, aor. 2. for £(pr}g from opog } fruitful. Qpovrig, a name ; Qpovrig, care. Eust. p. 907. QvXclkyi, a town in Thessaly ; (frvXaicri, watch. &wg (to), light; ^we (6), man. XaXjcrj, an island; x aAK ^? ^ en1, a 4J # ^ on - Phil* XaXKidiKt}, a town; x a ^- Kt ^ 1K ^? f em - a dj- Xaptcv, adv.; x a p* £V > neutr. adj. Xapirwv, a man's name; yapirwvj part, of xa0«"o. Xm, a Chian woman ; \ia, serpentis domus, Joh. Phil. XlXwv, a man's name ; \i Aeuv, part, of x*Aow. Xtoc, the island Chios ; Xlog, an inhabitant of Chios. Xirivv, a town ; x trajv ? a garment. Xoag, \oag. Conf. Ammonius. Xpi(s)v,fatale deorum ; \p^v,debitum, Joh. Phil. Xp7](Trog, a man's name ; XP 1 ? ™^ good. ^Pm, ^m. Conf. Ruhnk. ep. crit. p. 301. ed. sec. Vvxpog, a name; \pvxp6g, adj., cold. Conf. Phav. p. 1874. 50. 116 GREEK ACCENTUATION. *£2, with the vocative of a noun; w, an independent interjection. "Qifioi, an interjection; wfioi, nom. pi. of wfiog. Apollon. Dysc. de adv. p. 537. ^Q^/uLog, shoulder ; wfxog, raw. r Q pallor > <*>XP°G> pallidas. INDEX -a, feminines of 1 decl. §. 21. « — contr. from -aa, fern, of 1 decl. §. 21. I. a. — fem. of adjectives from masc. in og, §.30. _ of 3 decl. §. 31. — compound adj. of 1 decl. §. 32. 3. note. -— adverbs, §. 35. I. A. ayxiGrlvog, §. 33. II. 4. adjectives, §. 28—34. comp. and superl, §. 28. 1. gen. pi. of, §. 28. 2. Attic forms of, §. 30. III. in og, fem. of, §. 30. — ■ compound, §. 32 — 34. adverbs, §. 35. 36. a'tKbJv, §. 14. 2. b. note. -at), fem. of 1 decl. §. 22. II. a. m, when short for the accent, §. 5. 2. -ai, 3 sing, optat. §. 14. 1. perf. act. and pass. §. 15. 1. a. al, at, §.38. -aia, fem. of 1 decl. §. 21. I. b. ai/3oi, §. 38. ail,r\bg, §. 30. I. c. -aiov, neut. of 2 decl. §. 24. 4. -aiog, simple adjectives, §. 30. I. d. compound adj. §. 33. II. 7. proper names, §. 23. I. note 2. aire, §. 41. 2. aKatcrJTa, §. 32. 3. note. accusative plur. of 1 decl. §. 19. 3. ■ Dor. of masc. of 3 decl. §. 23. III. c. note 2. dual of contr. nouns of 2 decl. §. 23. I. note, accent, nature of, §. 1 — 9. dtcrjv, §. 36. 5. c. -aKi, adverbs, §. 35. I. I. 2. -aKig, adverbs, §. 35. II. -aKog, trisyll. of 2 decl. §. 30 III. note 1. dXaXrjfievog, §. I.e. note 1. 'AXkIvoq, §. 33. 2.4. dXX' §. 43. dXX v , §. 36. 4. -aXog, simp, adjectives, §. 30. II. a. 2. djxfieg, dfifii, §. 40. 2. a[A,(pw, dfjKpolv, §. 39. -av, polysyll. of 3 decl. §. 26. II. II. a. adverbs, §. 35. II. dva, §. 45. a. note 2. dvapporj, §. 22. I. b. note 2. anastrophe, §. 43. 45. dvoTraia, §. 36. 5. c. -avog, simp. adj. §. 30. II. c. 3. dvr , §. 43. dvriov, adj. compounded with, §. 33. II. 6. dvTiKpv, dvrucpvg, §. 35. I. Y. note, and II. aorist 1. act. and mid. §. 15. 2. a. part. act. §. 15. 2. a, 1. inf. act. §. 15. 2. a. 2. imperat. mid. §. 15. 2. a. 2. 2. imperat. §. 15. 2. b. I. * inf. §. 15. 2. b. II. part. act. §. 15. 2. b. III. ind., conj. and opt. §. 15. 2. b. IV. 1. and 2. pass, ind., imperat. and opt. §. 16. 7- B. 1. conj., infin. and part. §. 16. 7- B. 2. -aoc, subst. of 2 decl. §. 23. I. simp. adj. of 2 decl. §. 30. I. a. ankarai, §. 18. 2. a7r\6oc, o5c, §. 39. 2. a7ro, §. 45. a. c. dnodog, §. 13. 2. -ap, adverbs, §. 35. II. dpa, §. 37. 2. "PT^ §• 37. dpyvpo-rreZa, §. 30. -apoc, simp. adj.. §. 30. II. d. 1. dpxwv, §. 36. 5. c. 118 IN.DEX, -ag, masc. of 1 decl. §. 20. I. -ag, adog, subst. of 3 decl. §. 26. III. -ag, avTog, subst. of 3 decl. §. 26. III. -ag, subst. of 3 decl., Att. gen. of, §. 27- 1. neuters of 3 Att. decl. §. 27. III. simple adj. of I decl. §. 29. 1. -ag, adog, simp. adj. of 3 decl. §.31. -as, comp. adj. of 1 decl. §. 32. of 3 decl. §. 34. II- 1. — adverbs, §. 35. II. §. 36. 3. avfitvog, §. 15. 1. c. note 1. drsxvojg, a.T£xvu>g, §. 35. b. note. -art]g, masc. of 1 decl. §. 20 II. -avog, simple adj. §. 30. I. c. -avpog, simp. adj. §. 30. II. d. 4. avrapxrjg, §. 34. I. I. d. note 1. a, §. 13. 3. b. -yog, subst. of 2 decl. §. 23. III. a. yovvu)v, §.25. I. a. note 2. yvvri, yvvaiKog, §. 25. I. a. note 4. -da, fern, proper names, §.21. HI. note. — adverbs, §. 35. I. A. 3. Sat, §. 37. daivvro, §. 16. I. 3. note 1. dative pi. of participles, §. 16. 6. note 3. -de, adverbs, §. 36. 5. a. ds append, to pronouns, 6k, §. 47. 4. declension 1. of subst. 2. of subst. 3. of subst. §. 25. 26. — , Attic, of subst. §. 27- 3., monosyll. of, §. 25. 40. 5. 20—22. 23. 24. polysyll. of, §. 26. de^ajxevr], '§. 14. c. note 2. dtvpo, §. 35. 1. O. -8?], feminines of 1 decl. §. 22, IV. a. Srj7rov, §. 41. 2. -cijg, subst. of 1 decl. §. 20. II. il. d~ia, §. 30. didoTaSa, §. 16. 1. 1. note 3. dnrXog, §. 30. I. f. note 1. -Sic, adverbs, §. 35. II. di X y, §■ 36. 4. doXi X 6g, §. 30. III. -dov, adverbs, §. 35. II. dope, §. 25. I. a. note 4. dopv?6g, §. 30. 1. f. note 1. -dog, subst. of 2 decl. §. 23. III. a, — — simple adj. §.30. III. dovpeov, §. 25. I. a. note 2. 6v(»), dvolv, §. 39. E. ». §. 47. 2. -ea, Attic fern, of 1 decl. §. 21. I. c. lyiivya, eyojya, §. 40. 5. -ei, adverbs, §. 35. I. 3. 1. ei (at), §. 46. -sia, feminines of I decl. §. 21. I. d. adverbs, §. 35. I. A. 2. dafitvi), §. 14. c. note 2. tidov, §. 13. 3. note. UKooikZ,, §. 39. 3. eipL, §. 47. 1. -uov, neuters of 2 decl. §. 24. 5. -fiog, simp, adjectives, §. 30. I. d. 3. aVI, §. 15. 2. b. I. -tig, evrog, simp. adj. of 3 decl. §. 31. elg, §. 39. ds,] §• 47. 1. eicroTTtv, §. 36. 5. c. e'io-v, §. 15. 2. b. III. -£c, adverbs, §. 36. '5. a. &we, §. 30. III. -Zri, fern, of 1 decl. §. 22. IV. a -log, simp. adj. §. 30. II. e. 2. £wc, §. 27- II. 3. note. H. •r}, femininesofl decl. §. 22. -t], Att. pronouns, §. 40. 4. V, §• 37. 3. V, §• 37- 3. -tjSrig, comp, adj., gen. pi. of, §. 34. I. 1. d. note 1 . -rjXog, simp. adj. §. 30. II. a. 2. rjfjietg, r)fuv, r)[idg, &c. §. 40. 2. ijfievog, §. 15. 1. c. note 1. -t)v, subst. of 3 decl. §. 26. II. II. a. — adverbs, §. 35. II. -nog, subst. of 2 decl. §. 23. I. i'j7rep, §. 41. 2. ^7TOU, §. 41. 2. rip, syncopised forms of subst. of 3 decl. in, §. 25. I. a. note 4. -rip, subst. of 3 decl. §. 26. II. II. vocat. of, §. 26. II. dat. pi. of, §. 26. II. npkfia, §. 36. 5. c. -riprjg, subst. of 3 decl., vocat. of, §. 26. III. 3. rjpog, §. 25. 1. a. note 1. -rjpog, simp. adj. §. 30. II. d. 3. -rig j masc. of 1 decl. 20. II. — subst. of 3 decl. §. 26. I. III. masc. of 1 decl., Att. gen. of, §. 27- 1. simp. adj. of 1 decl. §. 29. 2. 3 decl — comp. adj. of 1 decl. 3 decl. — adverbs, §. 36. 3. Vjrvxy, r)iv), §. 47. 3. ffipiai, §. 47. 3. (T, 'i, §. 40. 2. note. 0-0W6, ctyojiv, §. 47. 3. ^X^, ffX9S» ^ §• 15 - IV - raXag, §. 31. TaXawo, §. 27- II. 3. note 1. rapT]g, (pijg, dfj, §. 13. 3. b. -0i, - §• 35. II. -%i, adverbs, §. 35. I. I. 1. note. -X<-e> adverbs, §. 35. II. xXoivrjg, gen. pi. %Xou^wr, §. 19. 2. -Xog, subst. of 2 decl. §. 23. III. c. XPV crr )G> g en - pl« XPWV'uv, §• 19- 2. %waTi£, §. 44. I. note. ¥. ^, polysyll. subst. of 3 decl. in, §. 26. II. 3. -i//oc, subst. of 2 decl. §. 23. II. f. simp. adj. §. 30. II. e. 2. Q. (i), when short for the accent, §.5. 1. -w, adverbs, §. 35. I. Q. and a. note 4. — polysyll. nouns of 3 decl. §. 26 I. o &, §.38. -wa, feminines of 1 decl. §. 21. I. h. -wdi]g, comp. adj. of 3 decl. §. 34. I. 1 -on), feminines of 1 decl. §. 22. II. b. -ioXijc, subst. of 3 decl., vocat. of, §. 26. III. 3. -oAog, simp. adj. §. 30. II. a. 5. INDEX, 123 ■o)v, subst. of 3 decl., syncop. forms of, §. 25. I. a. note 4. — vocat. of, §. 26. III. — §. 26. II. III. ■ojog, simp. adj. §. 30. 1. g. ■up, subst. of 3 decl. §. 26. II. -, vocat. of, §. 26. III. 2. ■uprjg, subst. of 3 decl., vocat. of, §. 26. III. 3. -wpog, simp. adj. §. 30. II. d. 5. -w£, subst. of 3 decl. §. 26. I. III. Attic subst. §. 27. II. simple adj. §. 30. III. adverbs, §. 35. a. b. tig, §. 35. a. note 2. ojg, §.46. uHnrep, §. 41. 2. wore, §. 41. 2. -ojTTjg, masculines of 1 decl. §. 20. II. c. FINIS. Gilbert & Rivington, Printers, St. John's Square, London. I 44 xs 57 W tS **• •^ ^^ V* 1 ► *• • » • 4*^ # % ^\ X 4*° »•' 49* -^"V : . °» /-^;r\ *^/ V'— T V \*!*fi\

% *y< c^ -*"-•* & 11 1 Thomson Park Drive Cranberry Township, pa 16066 (724)779-2111 © " « * "^^ •^ & 6°*