Page:Gesenius' Hebrew Grammar (1910 Kautzsch-Cowley edition).djvu/84

 Segôltā (seven times altogether) when this would stand at the head of the sentence; cf. , &c.

4 a. Zâqēph gādôl, and

4 b. Zâqēph qāṭôn. The names refer to their musical character. As a disjunctive, Little Zâqēph is by nature stronger than Great Zâqēph; but if they stand together, the one which comes first is always the stronger.

5.  Ṭiphḥā or  Ṭarḥā, a subordinate disjunctive before Sillûq and ʾAthnâḥ, but very often the principal disjunctive of the whole verse instead of ʾAthnâḥ; always so when the verse consists of only two or three words (e.g. ), but also in longer verses.

6.  Rebhîaʿ.

7.  Zarqā,.

8 a. Pašṭā,, and

8 b. Yethîbh, prepositive, and thus different from Mehuppākh. Yethîbh is used in place of Pašṭā when the latter would stand on a monosyllable or on a foretoned word, not preceded by a conjunctive accent.

9.  Tebhîr.

10 a. Gèreš or Ṭères, and

10 b. Gerāšáyim or Double Gèreš, used for Gèreš, when the tone rests on the ultima, and ʾAzlā does not precede.

11 a. Pâzēr, and

11 b. Pâzēr gādôl (Great Pâzēr) or Qarnê phārā (cow-horns), only used 16 times, for special emphasis.

12.  Teliša gedôlā or Great Teliša,.

13.  Legarmēh, i.e. Mûnaḥ (see below) with a following stroke.