Elements of language are the four-and-twenty letters. "Letter," however, has three meanings:
(1) the particular sound or element of speech;
(2) its written symbol or character;
(3) its name, as Alpha is the name of the sound "A".
Seven of the letters are vowels, a, e, ē i, o, u, ō, and six are mutes, b, g, d, k, p, t.
There is a difference between voice and speech; because, while voice may include mere noise, speech is always articulate.
Speech again differs from a sentence or statement, because the latter always signifies something, whereas a spoken word, as for example βλίτυρι, may be unintelligible—which a sentence never is.
And to frame a sentence is more than mere utterance, for while vocal sounds are uttered, things are meant, that is, are matters of discourse.
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