- the
Etnachta group can occur: Mercha, Tipcha, Munach,
Etnachta Mercha, Tipcha,
Etnachta Tipcha, Munach,
Etnachta Tipcha,
Etnachta Munach,
Etnachta Etnachta...
- disjunctive).
Etnachta can
appear without a Munach, but
Munach cannot appear without an
Etnachta (or
other following disjunctive). Munach-
Etnachta can appear...
- the Katon,
Etnachta, and
Segol groups. One or more
munachs can be
followed by many
different trope sounds,
including Zakef katon,
Etnachta, Rivia, Zarka...
- the
melody varies from one use to the next. It is the
beginning of the
Etnachta group, can be
found either once or
twice preceding the Sof p****uk, or can...
- Tarcha,
meaning "dragging" or "effort". The
Tipcha is
found in both the
Etnachta group as the
second member of that group, and in the Sof p****uk group,...
- YouTube. 10
March 2019.
Israel Broadcasting Authority, Kol Ha-Musika
Etnachta broadcast, 30 May 2016 "Oakland
Symphony performs a clarinetist's 'Dream'"...
-
merchot and
tipchot do not
necessarily have the same
melody as
those in the
etnachta group. Altogether,
there are five
possible arrangements how
these can appear...
- in one
paragraph and read
continuously by the
cantillist with only an
etnachta between sentences. The
first blessing is
straight from the
minor tractate...
-
group or a
Zakef gadol. It is the
strongest disjunctive group ahead of the
Etnachta group. The
Hebrew word סְגוֹל
translates into
English as bunch, referring...
-
gadol or katan, will
either be
followed by
another zakef segment or the
Etnachta group,
usually starting with a Mercha.[dubious – discuss] The
Zakef gadol...