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20 Μαΐ 2019 · Ecclesiastical Latin Pronunciation Guide. Pronouncing Church Latin is very different from pronouncing American English, and on the whole, much simpler. The most important thing to remember about Ecclesiastical Latin is the vowels, which are described immediately below. (Spanish-speakers rejoice!)
PRONUNCIATION GUIDE. The best way to gain an accurate pronunciation of liturgical Latin is to imitate the spoken word. There are only a few differences between the way in which some letters are pronounced in Latin and English, and although this is not an exhaustive list, the main differences are summarised as follows: C.
The pronunciation of Ecclesiastical Latin follows fairly straightforward rules as follows. Consonants. c, when it comes before e, ae, oe, i or y, is pronounced like the 'ch' in 'charm': IPA: /tʃ/.
A Guide to Ecclesiastical Latin Pronunciation. QU NGU. U preceded by Q or NG and followed by another vowel as in words like qui and sanguis, keeps its normal sound and is uttered as one syllable with the vowel which follows : qui, quae, quod, quam, sanguis. But notice that cui forms two syllables, and is pronounced as koo-ee.
ECCLESIASTICAL LATIN PRONUNCIATION. SINGLE VOWEL. PRONUNCIATION. EXAMPLES. = ah. as in father. patri, omnia, sanctum. e = eh.
You place the accents on Latin words following these simple rules: The accent is never on the last (ultimate) syllable. In a word of two syllables, the accent always falls on the first syllable: ser ́vus, mi ́hi, oc ́tō. In a word of three or more syllables.
Number of syllables and stress in Latin. The following rules should always be observed: Except in obvious diphthongs (ae, au, oe, often eu), every single vowel signals a separate syllable, as in the English word recipe (three syllables). Thus, in Latin 'de|si|ne' is three syllables and 'di|em' is two.