1984
DOI: 10.1086/366843
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A New Statistical Analysis of Accentual Prose Rhythms in Imperial Latin Authors

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Cited by 7 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…In fact there are several modern statistical methods that they can reveal firstly whether a writer favors or dislikes certain rhythmical patterns. 10 Here, only the methods taken into account in the on-line tool Cursus in clausula will be summarized.…”
Section: Methodologies For Analysing and Evaluating The Prose Rhythmmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In fact there are several modern statistical methods that they can reveal firstly whether a writer favors or dislikes certain rhythmical patterns. 10 Here, only the methods taken into account in the on-line tool Cursus in clausula will be summarized.…”
Section: Methodologies For Analysing and Evaluating The Prose Rhythmmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For the evaluating of canonic medieval cursus it is relevant to know the position of stress on the penultimate and 9 For an exhaustive definition of "suprasegmental" features see [17, 1 ss.]. 10 Among the most interesting and widespread methods are the ones studied by [18] on metrical endings, by [19] on cursus mixtus, and by [20] on medieval cursus. 11 [9,[12][13]: «[…] we need a method by which it is possible to compare the actually observed frequency of any cadence with the frequency to be expected if the author is indifferent to the use of that cadence.» the accent position with length in syllables of the ultimate word.…”
Section: Accentual Patterns Internal Comparison: Janson's Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…4 Regarding the following notation, "À" stands for a stressed syllable and "+" stands for an unstressed syllable. See, for example, Oberhelman and Hall (1984) and Janson (1975) for an in-depth analysis of this stylistic technique. 5 http://www.mlat.uzh.ch/MLS/ Petrus de Boateriis, since the collection consists of a miscellanea of different authors, often represented by just one epistle each; as such, this collection is hardly useful for our goals.…”
Section: Acknowledgmentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…En effet,l ' analyse des huit premiers chapitres prouve l'extrême pulvérisation des types de mètres dans les fins de phrases⁶¹: Nicolau1 930, 123 -131.Apartir de trois textes non rythmiques( Cicéron, Calvin et Descartes),Oberhelman 1984 trouved es pourcentages qui oscillent entre5 6,1%e t5 7, 9% . Collins 1992, 8 -9. En effet,l ' analyse des huit premiers chapitres prouve l'extrême pulvérisation des types de mètres dans les fins de phrases⁶¹: Nicolau1 930, 123 -131.Apartir de trois textes non rythmiques( Cicéron, Calvin et Descartes),Oberhelman 1984 trouved es pourcentages qui oscillent entre5 6,1%e t5 7, 9% . Collins 1992, 8 -9.…”
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