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- From dfanning@columbus.rr.com Thu Nov 01 05:58:01 2007
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Oliver--
While ash/aesc is the term I'm familiar with, it's true that it's just an English term, not a Latinate one, and the legend is in Latin (neo or otherwise). However, since "ligature" describes "oe" as well as "ae," I doubt it would be used to describe just the ae character. I don't know if Latin has a separate term for this character.
Others have asked about dipthongs. While ae functions as a dipthong, "dipthong" simply describes how two adjacent vowels are pronounced, so it's a different subject.
For what it's worth,
df
David F. Fanning Numismatic Literature PO Box 132422 Columbus, OH 43213 www.fanningbooks.com
PS: I did (finally) get a copy of the latest ANS Magazine, and your article was very interesting. The magazine is getting better and better.
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David,
Is aesc really the proper term here since the inscription in question is actually (neo-)Latin and not English? Latin of course used these types of ligatured letters well before the Old English term aesc was invented. I don't think I have ever heard or read a Latin epigrapher who used the term aesc to describe this sort of thing.
Oliver On 31-Oct-07, at 9:21 PM, David Fanning wrote:
Hi, Ray-- =20=20=20=20=20 In English, it's known as an aesc (pron. "ash"). It was used in Old English. Running two letters together to form a new one is called a ligature. =20=20=20=20=20 df (Ph.D., English) =20=20=20=20=20 David F. Fanning Numismatic Literature PO Box 132422 Columbus, OH 43213 www.fanningbooks.com
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