TY - BOOK ID - 85903560 TI - Consentius' de barbarismis et metaplasmis : critical edition, translation, and commentary AU - Consentius Grammaticus AU - Mari, Tommaso PY - 2021 SN - 9780198870302 0198870302 PB - Oxford Oxford University Press DB - UniCat KW - Latin language KW - Latin language, Colloquial KW - Variation KW - Consentius KW - Colloquial Latin KW - Colloquial language KW - Latin language, Vulgar KW - Classical languages KW - Italic languages and dialects KW - Classical philology KW - Latin philology KW - Spoken Latin KW - Variation. KW - Spoken Latin. KW - Latin language, Colloquial. UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:85903560 AB - Consentius probably lived in Gaul in the fifth century. His Ars de barbarismis et metaplasmis is the most extensive ancient treatise on deviations from 'standard' Latin, both errors (barbarisms) and poetic licenses (metaplasms). This volume provides the first English translation in a new critical edition, which benefits from new evidence on its textual transmission. Error and poetic license were long-standing topics of Greek and Roman reflections on language, and by late antiquity were rigidly codified in Roman grammar. Consentius' discussion of poetic license is fairly traditional, though he adds an original appendix on licence that are involved in verse scansion. His discussion of error is more original, as he criticised mainstream grammarians who took their examples of error from poetry, and instead took examples of errors from spoken language. By doing so, Consentius provides us with an unparalleled insight into spoken Latin: his list of errors has been analysed over the years by students of non-standard and regional Latin as well as the Romance languages, and his comments on vowel quantity and quality, the accent, and the sound of certain consonants are still the subject of much scholarly debate. Mari's commentary explains the textual choices made in the edition and the linguistic and interpretive difficulties of the text, reconstructs the place of Consentius' doctrine within the ancient grammatical tradition, and illustrates the linguistic information provided by Consentius from the point of view of historical linguistics. ER -