Название: An Outline of English Speech-craft
Автор: Barnes William
Издательство: Public Domain
Жанр: Зарубежная классика
isbn:
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ANH,
AM,
AN,
ANG;
as in the half-pent sounds —
half-pent by the tongue and mouth-roof.
For a hard breathing the mark is H, as and, hand; art, hart.
Words are of breath-sounds, and some words are one-sounded, as man; and others are tway-sounded, as manly; and others many-sounded, as unmanliness.
There is word-strain and speech-strain.
The high word-strain (accent) is the rising or strengthening of the voice on one sound of a word, as man´ly.
The high speech-strain (emphasis) is the rising or strengthening of the voice on a word of a thought-wording.
The voice may both rise and fall on the same sounds, as nō.
In English and its Teutonic sister speeches the strain keeps on the root or stem-word, as man, man´ly, man´liness; though in clustered words, with their first breath-sounds the same, the strain may shift for the sake of clearness, as ‘Give me the tea´pot’ – the teakettle is given, and thereupon the bidder may say ‘the teaPOT´,’ not the teaKETTLE.
In Greek the accent shifts in word-building, and likes mainly to settle at about two times or short breath-sounds from the end of the word; and in Welsh it settles mostly on the last breath-sound but one, as eis´tedd, a sitting; eistedd´fod, a sitting-stead; eisteddfod´an, sitting-steads, or bardic sessions.
Besides the word-strain (accent) and the speech-strain (emphasis), there is a speech-tuning (modulation) of the voice (voice-winding), which winds up or down with sundry feelings of the mind, and with question and answers and changes of the matter of speech.
Things may be matterly (concrete) or bodies of matter, as a man, a tree, a stone; or
Things may be unmatterly (abstract), not bodies of matter, as faith, hope, love, shape, speed, emptiness.
It is not altogether good that a matterly and unmatterly thing should be named by the very same word, as youth, a young man, and youth, youngness.
THINGS AND THING-NAMES
Things are of many kinds, as a man, a bird, a fish; an oyster, a sponge, a pebble; water, air, earth; honey, gold, salt.
The names of things may be called Thing-names.
But there are one-head thing-names (proper names), the names each of some one thing of its kind; as John, the miller; Toby, the dog; Moti, the lady’s Persian cat.
With Christian names may be ranked the so-called patronymics, or sire-names, taken from a father’s name, as William Johnson, Thomas Richardson; or in Welsh, Enid Verch Edeyrn; or in Hebrew Jeroboam Ben-nebat.
Thing Sundriness and Thing Mark-words.
☛ Mark is here to be taken in its old Saxon meaning, mearc– what bounds, defines, describes, distinguishes.
The Welsh call the adjective the weak name or noun, enw gwan.
Sundriness of Sex, Kindred, Youngness, and Smallness.
Marked by sundry names or mark-words, or mark endings.
Sex.
The stronger or carl sex, as a man; the weaker or quean sex, as a girl; the unsexly things, as a stone.
In Saxon the sexes in mankind were called halves or sides, the spear-half and the spindle-half.
Kindred, Youngness, or Smallness.
Small Things.
By forlessening mark-endings:
By mark-words:
A wee house, a little boy.
For bigness the English tongue wants name-shapes.
We have bul, horse, and tom, which are mark-words of bigness or coarseness.
Bulfinch.
Bullfrog.
Bulhead (the Miller’s Thumb. Pen-bwll, Welsh).
Bulrush.
Bulstang (the Dragonfly).
Bullspink.
Bulltrout.
Horse.
Horse-bramble.
Horse-chesnut.
Horse-laugh.
Horse-leech.
Horse-mushroom.
Horse-mussel.
Horse-tinger.
Horse-radish.
Tom.
Tomboy.
Tomcat.
Tomfool.
Tomnoddy.
Tomtit.
The words bul and horse are not taken from the animals.
Sundriness in Tale.
By tale mark-words, as one, five, ten, and others onward.
Sundriness in Rank.
By rank-word, as first, fifth, tenth, last.
An, a, the so-called indefinite article, is simply the tale mark-word an, one.
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