In the second line there is syllaba anceps at the end of the second choriambus.
If the series of which the verse is made up are quasi-independent of each other, so that hiatus or syllaba anceps occurs in the caesura, the verse is styled asynartetic (Gr.
There is regularly a diaeresis between the two parts, but hiatus and syllaba anceps are not allowed at the end of the first series.
In Archilochus the verse is said to have been asynartetic (2535); but Horace and Prudentius do not allow hiatus or syllaba anceps in the diaeresis, and Prudentius sometimes neglects the diaeresis altogether.
The verse is not asynartetic (2535), neither syllaba anceps nor hiatus being allowed at the end of the first tripody.
Hiatus and syllaba anceps sometimes occur in the diaeresis.
It consists of six feet, the last of which is a spondee (but with the privilege of syllaba anceps; see 2534).
There is regularly a diaeresis after the fourth foot, and hiatus and syllaba anceps sometimes occur in the diaeresis.
Hiatus and syllaba anceps sometimes occur in the diaeresis, the verse being asynartetic (2535).
Habet etiam unaquaeque syllaba altitudinem, latitudinem et longitudinem; altitudinem in tenore; crassitudinem vel latitudinem, in spiritu; longitudinem in tempore.
Nam Iulhis et Iarbas cum dicis, I consonans non est, licet praecedat, quia in una syllaba secum non habet conjunctam vocalem, sed in altera consequentem.
The sixth foot may be either a spondee or a trochee, since the final syllable of a verse may be either long or short (syllaba anceps).
Hence the final syllable may be either long or short (syllaba anceps), and may terminate in a vowel or m, even though the next verse begins with a vowel.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "syllaba" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.