Page:Gesenius' Hebrew Grammar (1910 Kautzsch-Cowley edition).djvu/85

 B. Conjunctive Accents ( or ).

14.  Mûnaḥ.

15.  Mehuppākh or  Mahpākh.

16 a. or Mêrekhā, and

16 b. Mêrekhā khephûl̄â or Double Mêrekhā.

17.  Dargā.

18.  ʾAzlā, when associated with Gèreš (see above) also called Qadmā.

19.  Teliša qeṭannā or Little Teliša,.

20.  Galgal or  Yèraḥ.

[21.  Meʾayyelā or  Mâyelā, a variety of Ṭiphḥa, serves to mark the secondary tone in words which have Sillûq or ʾAthnâḥ, or which are united by Maqqēph with a word so accentuated, e.g.  .]

II. The Accents of the Books.

A. Distinctivi.

1. Sillûq (see above, I, 1).

2.  ʿÔlè weyôrēd, a stronger divider than

3. ʾAthnâḥ (see above, I, 2). In shorter verses ʾAthnâh suffices as principal distinctive; in longer verses ʿÔlè weyôrēd serves as such, and is then mostly followed by ʾAthnâḥ as the principal disjunctive of the second half of the verse.

4. Rebhiaʿ gādôl (Great Rebhiaʿ).

5. Rebhiaʿ mugrāš, i.e. Rebhiaʿ with Gèreš on the same word.

6. Great Šalšèleth (see above, I. 3 b).

7.  Ṣinnôr (Zarqā), as, is easily distinguished from  Ṣinnôrîth similarly placed, which is not an independent accent, but stands only over an open syllable before a consonant which has Mêrekhā or Mahpākh.

8. Rebhiaʿ qāṭôn (Little Rebhiaʿ) immediately before ʿÔlè weyôrēd.

9.  Deḥî or Ṭiphḥā,, to the right underneath the initial consonant, e.g.  (consequently it does not mark the tone-syllable).