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Apex (diacritic)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In written Latin, the apex (plural "apices") is a mark with roughly the shape of an acute accent (´) or apostrophe (ʼ) that was sometimes placed over vowels to indicate that they were long.[1]

The shape and length of the apex can vary, sometimes within a single inscription. While virtually all apices consist of a line sloping up to the right, the line can be more or less curved, and varies in length from less than half the height of a letter to more than the height of a letter. Sometimes, it is adorned at the top with a distinct hook, protruding to the left. Rather than being centered over the vowel it modifies, the apex is often considerably displaced to the right.[2]

Essentially the same diacritic, conventionally called in English the acute accent, is used today for the same purpose of denoting long vowels in a number of languages with Latin orthography, such as Irish (called in it the síneadh fada [ˈʃiːnʲəˈfˠad̪ˠə] or simply fada "long"), Hungarian (hosszú ékezet [ˈhosːuːˈeːkɛzɛt], from the words for "long" and "wedge"), Czech (called in it čárka [ˈtʃaːrka], "small line") and Slovak (dĺžeň [ˈdl̩ːʐeɲ], from the word for "long"), as well as for the historically long vowels of Icelandic.

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Transcription

Details

Apices are usually thinner than the lines that compose the letters on which they stand. They appear in both epigraphic and palaeographic texts, although they are not always included in transcriptions.

An apex is not used with the letter ⟨i⟩; instead, the letter is written taller (as a "long i"), as in lv́ciꟾ·a·fꟾliꟾ (Lūciī a fīliī) in the next illustration.

Inscription showing the use of very thin apices and long i.avgvstó·sacr· / a·a·lci·a·fli·men· / procvlvs·et·iliánvs· / p · s · / dédicátióne·decvriónibvs·et· / avgvstálibvs·cénam·dedérvnt. Herculaneum, 1st century CE.
Epitaph showing the use of apices and long i. In the transcription, abbreviations are spelled out in parentheses.c(aivs)·avrelivs / parthenivs / órnáments·dec(vrionalibus) / honórátvs·col(oniae)·aug(ustae) / nemavs·iiiivir·avg(vstalis) / col(onia)·cópia·clavd(ia)·avg(usta)·lvgvd(vnensis) / item·nárbóne·mártio / et·fir(ma)·il(ia)·secvnd(anorum)aravsióne / et·foro·ivli·pácáto / vbqve·grátvits·honóribvs.Nimes, 1st–2nd century CE.
Papyrus fragment written in Roman cursive showing apices.
uobis · ujdetur · p · c · decernám[us · ut · etiam]
prólátis · rebus ijs · júdicibus · n[ecessitas · judicandi]
imponátur quj · jntrá rerum [· agendárum · dies]
jncoháta · judicia · non · per[egerint · nec]
defuturas · ignoro · fraudes · m[onstrósa · agentibus]
multas · aduersus · quas · exc[ogitáuimus]...

Other markers of long vowels are attested, such as the reduplication of the vowel and the use of <ei> for long /i/ in archaic epigraphy, but the apex was the standard vowel-length indicator in classical times.[3] The grammarian Quintilian wrote that apices are necessary when a difference of quantity in a vowel changes the meaning of a word, as in malus and málus, but recommended against including them otherwise.[4] Terentius Scaurus had a similar recommendation.[5] Long vowels were never consistently indicated, even within individual inscriptions; writers most often marked them in grammatical endings, to avoid visual confusion with other letters, and to denote phrasal units.[1]

Pilate stone (1st century AD?) with a large apex mark.

In modern Latin orthography, apices are typically not used, but the acute accent, which is similar in appearance, is sometimes used to mark stressed syllables.[citation needed] Long vowels are sometimes marked by a macron.[citation needed]

Identification with the sicilicus

The apex (used above vowels) is often contrasted with the sicilicus, a rarely-attested ancient Latin diacritic used above consonants to denote that they should be pronounced double. Revilo P. Oliver argues that they are one and the same sign, a mark of gemination which was used over any letter to indicate that the letter should be read twice.[2] The distinction between a sicilicus that was used above consonants and an apex that was applied to vowels is then completely artificial: "There is no example of this mark [the sicilicus] that can be distinguished from an apex by any criterion other than its presence above a letter that is not a long vowel," Oliver writes, and "No ancient source says explicitly that there were two different signs...".

If Oliver is right,[original research?] the apex as a sign denoting vowel length would have its origin in the time when long vowels were written double. Then, when long vowels ceased to be regularly written twice, the usage of the sicilicus above vowels evidently remained, even after it fell out of use above consonants, and the apex, as it was now called, was redefined as a sign denoting the phonematic feature of vowel length, rather than as a purely orthographic shorthand. However, Oliver's view that the two marks were identical has been challenged.[6]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Fortson IV, Benjamin W. (2020). "An Overlooked Usage of Apices and I Longae? Notes on CIL VI 2080". Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik. 214: 67–79 – via JSTOR.
  2. ^ a b Oliver, Revilo P. (April 1966). "Apex and Sicilicus". The American Journal of Philology. 87 (2): 149. JSTOR 292702.
  3. ^ Rolfe, John C. (1922). "The Use of Devices for Indicating Vowel Length in Latin". Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society. 61 (1): 80–98 – via JSTOR.
  4. ^ Inst. 1,7,2s: longis syllabis omnibus adponere apicem ineptissimum est, quia plurimae natura ipsa verbi quod scribitur patent, sed interim necessarium, cum eadem littera alium atque alium intellectum, prout correpta vel producta est, facit: ut 'malus' arborem significet an hominem non bonum apice distinguitur, 'palus' aliud priore syllaba longa, aliud sequenti significat, et cum eadem littera nominativo casu brevis, ablativo longa est, utrum sequamur plerumque hac nota monendi sumus. Translation by Russell (2002) from the Loeb Classical Library: "it would be very silly to put an apex over all long syllables, because the length of most of them is obvious from the nature of the word which is written, but it is sometimes necessary, namely when the same letter produces different senses if it is long and if it is short. Thus, in malus, an apex indicates that it means 'apple tree' and not 'bad man'; palus also means one thing if the first syllable is long and another if the second is long; and when the same letter is found as short in the nominative and as long in the ablative, we commonly need to be reminded which interpretation to choose."
  5. ^ Terentius Scaurus, De Orthographia VII,33,5
  6. ^ Fontaine, Michael (2006). ""Sicilicissitat" (Plautus, "Menaechmi" 12) and Early Geminate Writing in Latin (With an Appendix on "Men." 13)". Mnemosyne. 59 (1): 95–110 – via JSTOR.
This page was last edited on 16 May 2024, at 04:33
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