Sicilicus

Sicilicus

In Old Latin a sicilicus is a diacritical mark like a laterally inverted C (namely Ɔ) [Cf. John Edwin Sandys, "A Companion to Latin Studies", Cambridge University Press 1910, §1099, p. 743, where specific instances are provided: "C.I.L." v 1361, x 3743, xii 414.] 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 [Cf. Isidore "Etymologiae" 1.27.29 ("ubi litterae consonantes geminabantur, sicilicum superponebant, ut 'cella', 'serra', 'asseres': ueteres enim non duplicabant litteras, sed supra sicilicos adponebant; qua nota admonebatur lector geminandam esse litteram"); Nisus fr. 5 Mazzarino in Velius Longus "de Orthographia" Keil 7.80; Gaius Marius Victorinus "Ars Grammatica" 4.2 Mariotti.] 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 palæographic 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. Plautus appears to allude to the sicilicus in the prologue to Menaechmi. [ [http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/brill/mne/2006/00000059/00000001/art00005 "Sicilicissitat" (Plautus, "Menaechmi" 12) and Early Geminate Writing in Latin (with an Appendix on "Men". 13)] ]

ee also

* Open O, although this is a full letter, and not a diacritic placed above a letter
* Antisigma, although this is a full letter, and not a diacritic placed above a letter
* Apex (diacritic), used for long vowels instead of long consonants
* Apostrophe, whose shape is derived from it
* Comma (punctuation), whose shape is similar
* Caron, an unrelated diacritic
* Latin spelling and pronunciation

References

* [http://archimedes.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/cgi-bin/toc/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 Lewis and Short Latin Lexicon]

Notes


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