For instance, a two-note neume (clivis or podatus) can be like a two-syllable word, with an elastic dynamic accent on the first note, followed in a single impulse by a softer note. A three-note neume (torculus, porrectus, scandicus, or climacus) will have an elastic dynamic accent on the first note, followed in a single impulse by two softer notes.
most people drop the second “s” in “suscipe” which is divided “sus-ci-pe” in the Vatican edition and in the Solesmes books.
["Suscipiat Dominus ..." one of the very few prayers I as a layman am allowed to say at Mass, and I have been mispronouncing the first syllable for at least the last 74 years!]suscipiō (succip-) cēpī, ceptus, ere
subs (see sub)+capio, to take, catch, take up, lift up, receive :
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