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Penultimate rule : ウィキペディア英語版 | Latin_spelling_and_pronunciation #REDIRECT Latin_spelling_and_pronunciation#Syllables_and_stress The “penultimate rule” is a rule for syllable stress in Latin which, according to Cicero and Quintilian, determines the accentuation of classical Latin.〔Romance Languages: A Historical Introduction - 2010 p7 "1.1.4 The Penultimate Rule This rule assigning word stress in Latin is stated in terms of syllable weight. Once you have identified the boundaries of a syllable, you have to determine whether it's heavy or light. Definition: A syllable is heavy if it ..."〕 According to the rule stress-accent falls on the penultimate syllable if it is of 'heavy', and on the antepenultimate if the penultimate is 'light.'〔Vox Graeca: The Pronunciation of Classical Greek William Sidney Allen - 1987 p151 "The Latin system is, as we know, governed by the so-called 'penultimate' rule (cf. VL, p. 83), whereby a stress-accent falls on the penultimate syllable if it is of 'heavy' structure, and on the antepenultimate if the penultimate is 'light'; according to ...〕 ==References==
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