apostrophus

English

Etymology

Latin apostrophus

Noun

apostrophus (plural apostrophi)

  1. (archaic) The omission of a vowel or syllable from a word, usually indicated by the apostrophe symbol ( ' ). examples: 'til, can't
    • 1640, Ben Jonson, The English Grammar: Book 2: Of Syntax:
      Vowels suffer also this apostrophus before the consonant h.
    • 1824, August Matthiä, Copious Greek Grammar - Volume 1, page xxxvi:
      Not that any examples are wanting to prove that the ancients did use the apostrophus in prose; for it was scarecely possible for them not to do so in many instances;
    • 1865, Alexander Hume, ‎ Henry Benjamin Wheatley, Of the Orthographie and Congruitie of the Britan Tongue:
      Out of one word, the apostrophus is most usual in poesie;
  2. (archaic) The apostrophe symbol used to mark this elision.
    • 1644, Richard Hodges, The English Primrose:
      The apostrophus or mark of contraction, is the same with the comma, onely the difference is of place; for, this stands not in the line, but over the upper part thereof, where the contraction is:
    • 1833, Philipp Buttmann, ‎ Edmund Henry Barker, Dr. Philip Buttmann's Intermediate Or Larger Greek Grammar, page 46:
      In the Greek, as in other languages, a short vowel at the end of a word before another vowel, is thrown out by elision, and the apostrophus ' is placed as a mark or sign over the empty space;
    • 1842, George Knox Gillespie, The Formative Greek Grammar, page 4:
      This apocope is denoted by the apostrophus ( ' ),
  3. (music, historical) An open notehead ( ~ ) or an apostrophe ( ' ) used as a neume to mark a low, unaccented syllable at the beginning of a phrase or a short quick syllable
    • 1598, William Shakespeare, Love's Labour's Lost:
      You find not the apostrophus, and so miss the accent. Let me supervise the canzonet.
    • 2009, Iain Fenlon, Early Music History, page 66:
      In the early Graduals Benevento VI. 38 and 40, the apostrophus is common in syllabic passages in sequences, tropes and prosulae.
    • 2010, Rebecca Maloy, Inside the Offertory: Aspects of Chronology and Transmission, page iv:
      In transcriptions from Ben 34, I have not distinguished the apostrophus from regular notes.
    • 2017, John Boe, Chant and Notation in South Italy and Rome before 1300, page 66:
      The early Beneventan apostrophus was optional, instructive and exemplary, suggesting low, quick, unaccented syllables at the start of a phrase (sometimes implying a preceding breath) in the Gregorian Mass Propers and short or quick syllables in tropes, prosulae and sequences.
  4. The symbol 'Ɔ', used in Roman numerals to indicate multiplication by 10.
    • 1862, Richard Hiley, The Elements of Latin Grammar, page 26:
      In every multiplication with ten a fresh apostrophus is added; thus IƆƆ = 5000, IƆƆƆ = 50,000.
    • 1878, Ethan Allen Andrews, Grammar of the Latin Language, page 72:
      The annexing of the apostrophus or inverted C (Ɔ) to IƆ makes its value ten times greater;
    • 2002, Allied Chambers, The Chambers Dictionary:
      The symbol Ɔ, known as the apostrophus, might be repeated one or more times after IƆ , each Ɔ making the number ten times greater , as IƆƆ = 5000 , ƆƆƆƆ = 500 000.
    • 2018, Jan K. Coetzee, Books & Bones & Other Things, page 78:
      Anno CIƆ IƆ C LXXXVI. (Apostrophus numbering): In the year 1686

Latin

Etymology

From Ancient Greek ἀπόστροφος (apóstrophos, literally turned back), from ἀποστρέφω (apostréphō, I turn away).

Pronunciation

Noun

apostrophus m (genitive apostrophī); second declension

  1. (Late Latin, orthography) The symbol '; apostrophe

Declension

Second-declension noun.

Case Singular Plural
Nominative apostrophus apostrophī
Genitive apostrophī apostrophōrum
Dative apostrophō apostrophīs
Accusative apostrophum apostrophōs
Ablative apostrophō apostrophīs
Vocative apostrophe apostrophī

Descendants

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