Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q1237791> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 24 of
24
with 100 triples per page.
- Q1237791 subject Q6276621.
- Q1237791 subject Q7142639.
- Q1237791 subject Q8790507.
- Q1237791 abstract "A sicilicus was an old Latin diacritical mark, ͗, like a reversed C (Ɔ) placed above a letter and evidently deriving its name from its shape like a little sickle (which is sicilis in Latin). The ancient sources say that during the time of the Republic it was placed above a geminate consonant to indicate that the consonant counted twice, although there is hardly any epigraphic and paleographic evidence available from such an early time. When such geminate consonants began to be represented during classical times by writing the letter twice, the sicilicus naturally fell into disuse in this function, but continued to be used to indicate the doubling of vowels as an indication of length in the developed form of the apex. It has been suggested that Plautus alludes to the sicilicus in the prologue to Menaechmi.In Unicode, it is encoded as U+0357 ͗ COMBINING RIGHT HALF RING ABOVE (HTML ͗).".
- Q1237791 wikiPageExternalLink dict?step=entry;head=si_ci_li%5Ecus;dict=d003;inword=sicilicum;;back=http%3A%2F%2Farchimedes.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de%2Fcgi-bin%2Ftoc%2Fdict%3Fstep%3Dtable%3Bword%3D%2526longs%253Bicilicum%3Blang%3Dla.
- Q1237791 wikiPageWikiLink Q1161819.
- Q1237791 wikiPageWikiLink Q1232690.
- Q1237791 wikiPageWikiLink Q1234399.
- Q1237791 wikiPageWikiLink Q1240100.
- Q1237791 wikiPageWikiLink Q161736.
- Q1237791 wikiPageWikiLink Q162940.
- Q1237791 wikiPageWikiLink Q17167.
- Q1237791 wikiPageWikiLink Q394560.
- Q1237791 wikiPageWikiLink Q397.
- Q1237791 wikiPageWikiLink Q42233.
- Q1237791 wikiPageWikiLink Q436048.
- Q1237791 wikiPageWikiLink Q47160.
- Q1237791 wikiPageWikiLink Q6276621.
- Q1237791 wikiPageWikiLink Q7142639.
- Q1237791 wikiPageWikiLink Q741520.
- Q1237791 wikiPageWikiLink Q852201.
- Q1237791 wikiPageWikiLink Q8790507.
- Q1237791 comment "A sicilicus was an old Latin diacritical mark, ͗, like a reversed C (Ɔ) placed above a letter and evidently deriving its name from its shape like a little sickle (which is sicilis in Latin). The ancient sources say that during the time of the Republic it was placed above a geminate consonant to indicate that the consonant counted twice, although there is hardly any epigraphic and paleographic evidence available from such an early time.".
- Q1237791 label "Sicilicus".