Originally posted by vinteuil
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Pronunciation watch
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostBut is the "i" supposed to be almost silent?
Originally posted by french frank View PostWell, my dictionary gives Latin iō (Greek ἰώ; monosyllable or disyllable) as an interjection of joy, ho! hurrah!, as used by Plautus, Tibullus, Horace); but also of pain (Plautus, Tibullus).
The English words of the carol are early C20 - pity nobody thought to ask the author while he was still alive!
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Originally posted by french frank View PostThat was the example I alluded to. Is it in Mozart's Marriage of Figaro (Act II quartet)??? where three characters sing in turn:
Ee-o
Ee-o
Ee-o
Originally posted by jean View Post...the tendency of some English amateur singers to lose the 'i' of the pronoun 'io' completely when it's set to one note as so often in Monteverdi madrigals...Originally posted by french frank View PostI didn't realise it was a new term. I'd thought it was connected with 'rhotacism'. But this isn't relevant here, is it?
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Originally posted by jean View PostAm I imagining it, or have I just heard the R4 continuity announcer speak of In dulci yoobeeyo? Has he been misreading this thread?
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Andrew Marr this morning insists on stressing St Augustine on his first syllable - Christopher de Hamel tries to remember to defer to the presenter, but sometimes forgets and stresses the second syllable instead (as is the usual way, isn't it?)
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