Dear Stewart,

You know we say "kris-kras". The origin of that is only to be understood as
a translation of the English expression. In the Dutch language there is not
much etymological sense to be found for it.

Interesting, to start the alfabet with such a symbol. Was that in languages
with (a certain measure of) Roman influence only? Or has there been such a
tradition as well in Germanic or Slavic or other languages?

About count Pepoli, it is quite shocking to see Foscarini (p. 22) cry out
things like GONE, OLGA, DOEI (we say for bye!). Looks like a Gilles de la
Tourette in music notation....

Lex



> Dear Lex and Odoardo,
>
> When 16th-century children learned their alphabet, they began with
> Christ's Cross, and then continued with A, B, C, etc. Although it's
> not really a letter, the chap who invented guitar alfabeto
> considered it to be one. By the way, Christ's Cross is the origin of
> the English expression "criss-cross".
>
> Best wishes,
>
> Stewart McCoy.



To get on or off this list see list information at
http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html

Reply via email to