Long I

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Long i (Latin: i longum or [littera] i longa), written ⟨ꟾ⟩, is a variant of the letter i found in ancient and early medieval forms of the Latin script.

History

[edit | edit source]

In inscriptions dating to the early Roman Empire, it is used frequently but inconsistently to transcribe the long vowel /iː/. In Gordon's 1957 study of inscriptions, it represented this vowel approximately 4% of the time in the 1st century CE, then 22.6% in the 2nd century, 11% in the 3rd, and not at all from the 4th century onward,[1] reflecting a loss of phonemic vowel length by this time (one of the phonological changes from Classical Latin to Proto-Romance). In this role it is equivalent to the (also inconsistently-used) apex, which can appear on any long vowel: á é í ó v́ /aː uː/. An example would be fIliI, which is generally spelled fīliī today, using macrons rather than apices to indicate long vowels. On rare occasions, an apex could combine with long i to form Í, e.g. dÍs·mánibus.

The long i could also be used to indicate the semivowel [j], e.g. ⟨IVSTVS or CVIIVS,[2] the latter also CVIVS, pronounced [ˈjus̠tus̠, ˈkujːus̠]. It was also used to write a close allophone [i] of the short i phoneme, used before another vowel, as in CLAVDIO, representing [ˈklau̯.di.oː].[3]

Later on in the late Empire and afterwards, in some forms of New Roman cursive, as well as pre-Carolingian scripts of the Early Middle Ages such as Visigothic or Merovingian, it came to stand for the vowel ⟨i⟩ in word-initial position. For example, iNponunt in umeroſ⟩, which would be inpōnunt in umerōs in modern spelling.

In Unicode

[edit | edit source]

The character exists in Unicode as U+A7FE latin epigraphic letter i longa, ⟨ꟾ⟩, having been suggested in a 2006 proposal.[4]

Examples

[edit | edit source]

References

[edit | edit source]
  1. ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
  2. ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
  3. ^ Allen, Vox Latina, pp. 51-52, giving the examples dIes, prIvsqvam, pIvs
  4. ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).

See also

[edit | edit source]