re contiguous, one of them must be accented.
s of a word with the accen
of a word with the accent on
vowels with the accent
will be a combination of two vowels with the first accented, plus a combination of two vowels after the accent. In tráeos, for example, the a and e
e syllables by b (2) (b), and the í and a would probably be in separate syllables also by b (2)(a). Therefore, creia would probably be a trisyllable. In cambiáos the i and á might form on
for example, the e and u might be in the same syllable by a (1), or in separate syllables by dieresis by a (1) (a), and the u an
yzed in a similar way, as may also combination
YNAL
ur synalepha (which corresponds to diphthongization within a
l. 22. ?á qué me lo decís? lo sé^:^es m
en cuya cresta, p. 173,
except when the same vowel is repeated, when only a pr
five vowels. The union of two vowels (diphthongal synalepha) and th
revent synalepha. Mute h is disregarded in
lo, y apénas ?oh^herm
NGAL SY
two contiguous unaccented vowe
ernidad, p. 178
the final vowel of the
, flotando ante mis o
word is accented, especially when the first word ends in a w
cielo de la tarde,
us is preferable even with the above combinations, in a syllable
y al hablar, vibrante
á la playa viene, p.
ONGAL S
e vowel; or when o or e is the middle vowel, except in the
expirar, p. 178
weak vowel stands between two strong vowels. Therefore
y oro la matiza,
a when í (y) is the middle vowel,
uí valiente, fuí a
may be synalepha if i follows i
epha with a word
o huesped tarda.
ls which would usually make triphthongal
he group ends in two vowels
|a^abiertos, p.
vowels of the second word
ea que, cuantas vec
econd begins with a vowel in a constituent syllable (
designio honr
not in a constituent syll
a á descubrir no alca
e vowel, and the second word begins wit
eloso austro
well be considered
TWEEN FOUR O
s common, y
donde no hay cel
AT
t syllable. It may occur between the article and its substantive, the possessive adjective and its substantive, a preposition and its object, the negative
, or of a word that has a strongly accented position in the verse; as, for example, when the syllable is the next
s y batir de alas
á la playa viene, p.
e, the phrase de^oro is us
pálida, mis trenz
, sometimes observ
y de oro, p. 1
n though there is no close syntactical relation, although the vowels ma
atólica patente!
e va? p. 178, XXXVII
YTHMIC
ution of accents within a line. Words have an accent of their own a
llables of a verse, is known as rhythmic accent. It plays somewhat the same r?le as did quantity
rmine the regular recurrence of long and short syllables in Latin verse are not very
VERSIFICATION APPL
sometimes applied to Spanish verse
or example, substituting stress
- | /
first, third, fifth,
r alternation of unaccented and
ecurrence of an accented syllable fol
/ - -
middle one would be stressed, - / -. This construction is sometimes followed in lines of
tressed syllables preceding a stressed syllable, - - /. Thi
SH VERSE
dad, luz, yo; llana (or grave) when it has the accent on the penult, e.g. trabajo, fru
r esdrújulo according to whether its final w
r two syllables. Therefore, Ni tu ni yo jamá
les does not change. Therefore, Detrás del ab
al syllable does not count, either in enumerating the syllables in the verse or for the r
BUTION OF RHY
rules with regard to the distribution of accents,
upon the syllable nominally
e in a versa agudo counts as two syllables, and that the next
l verses of seven syllables or more must have other necessary acc
hould never be accented, for it obstructs the proper accentuation of the
OF SYLLABLES I
yllables from two up to sixteen. All must ha
se may be composed of a single word
! p. 173, X
no supernum
ables can have no supernumerary accent,
Susp
t have an accent on the third syllable. There may
e ese
ave an accent on the fourth. It may or may not have a
nóro, p. I 7
le with necessary accents on
o blando.
e an accent on the fifth. There may or may not be sup