Hilton, John Laurence.2012-12-112012-12-1119931993Hilton, J.L. 1993. Cohesion in Latin. South African Journal of Linguistics, 11 sup. 15, pp. 41-54.1018-7820http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10118063.1993.9724333http://hdl.handle.net/10413/8187The full text of this article is not available online. The print version is available in the E.G. Malherbe Library, Howard College. The journal may be found on the 4th floor at J 410.968 S1.This article discusses ancient and modern concepts of textual coherence and in Latin. A number of ideas about the degree of cohesion in the letters of Cicero, compared with those of Seneca and Pliny are discussed. The article shows that Seneca and Pliny make more use of asyndeton within the sentence than Cicero, and undertakes a statistical analysis of coordinate and subordinate connectors in a selected corpus of texts. This analysis gives a reliable indication of the degree of cohesion in the corpus.enLatin literature--Criticism, Textual.Latin literature--History and criticism.Latin philology.Cohesion in Latin.Peer reviewed journal article