Singing Early Music: The pronunciation of European languages in the late Middle Ages and Renaissance.(Music: Scholarship and per
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Preface Acknowledgments How to Use This Guide Common Abbreviations1. Introduction Phonetics, David N. Klausner Overview of EuropeanLanguages, A. G. Rigg Latin, A. G. Rigg Britain 2. English, David N.Klausner Diachronic Sound Chart Sample Texts 3. Sixteenth-Century Scots,David N. Klausner Sample Texts 4. Anglo-Latin, A. G. Rigg Diachronic SoundChart Sample Texts France 5. Old French, Robert Taylor Diachronic SoundChart Picard Sounds (Typical Picard Sounds) Sample Texts 6. French Latin,Harold Copeman Diachronic Sound Chart Sample Texts 7. Occitan, RobertTaylor Sample Texts Iberian Peninsula 8. Catalan, Beata FitzPatrickDiachronic Sound Chart Sample Texts 9. Spanish (Castilian), James F. BurkeDiachronic Sound Chart Sample Texts 10. Spanish Latin, Harold CopemanSample Texts 11. Galician-Portuguese, Joseph T. Snow and James BurkeDiachronic Sound Chart Sample Texts 12. Portuguese Latin, Harold CopemanSample Texts Italy 13. Italian, Gianrenzo Clivio Sample Texts 14. ItalianLatin, harold Copeman Sample Texts Germany and the Low Countries 15.Middle High German, Peter Frenzel Sample Texts 16. Late Medieval German andEarly New High German, Peter Frenzel Diachronic Sound Chart Sample Texts17. German Latin, Harold Copeman and Vera U. G. Scherr Sample Texts 18.Flemish (Dutch), William Z. Shetter Sample Texts 19. Netherlands Latin,harold Copeman Sample Texts Glossary Index to Compact Disk ContributorsPhonetic Chart, David N. Klausner