Division of Words - Rules for the Division of Words at the Ends of Lines, with Remarks on Spelling, Syllabication and Pronunciation by Frederick William Hamilton
page 37 of 78 (47%)
page 37 of 78 (47%)
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(_reck-n_).
The division of words into syllables for pronunciation is generally, but not always, the same as that which should be followed in case the word has to be divided typographically. As these text-books are intended to help the apprentice as a speaker and writer of English as well as a printer, it is worth while to give some attention to syllabication for pronunciation before proceeding to discuss typographical division.[The illustrations from this point to the end of this section on page 16 are not typographic divisions. They concern pronunciation only.] Two letters forming a diphthong or digraph are not to be separated. _Coin-age_ (_oi_ diphthong) but _co-in-ci-dence_ (_oi_ not a diphthong). _Excess_ (_ss_ digraph, pronounced practically like a single s) gives _ex-cess-es_, _ex-cess-ive_, etc. Whether or not the letters thus occurring together form a diphthong or digraph will depend on the derivation of the word, thus in _cat-head_ (verb), a nautical term, _th_ is not a digraph but in _ca-the-dral_ _th_ is a digraph, as is usually the case with these two letters. You would not say _cat-hed-ral_. Two vowels, or a vowel and a diphthong, coming together but sounded separately belong to separate syllables. _A-or-ta_, _co-op-er-ate_, but _coop-er-age_, _moi-e-ty_. Do not end a syllable with (_a_) _c_ or _g_ when soft, _en-ti-cing_, but _dic-tion_, _wa-ges_ but _wag-on_. |
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