The rules governing the sequence of cantillation marks are as follows.
- A verse is divided into two half verses, the first ending with,
and governed by, etnachta, and the second ending with, and governed
by, sof pasuq. A very short verse may have no etnachta and be
governed by sof pasuq alone.
- A half verse may be divided into two or more phrases marked off by
second-level disjunctives.
- A second-level phrase may be divided into two or more sub-phrases
marked off by third-level disjunctives.
- A third-level phrase may be divided into two or more sub-phrases
marked off by fourth-level disjunctives.
- The last subdivision within a phrase must always be constituted by
a disjunctive one level down, chosen to fit the disjunctive governing
the phrase and called (in the Table below) its "near
companion". Thus, a disjunctive may be preceded by a disjunctive of
its own or a higher level, or by its near companion, but not by any
other disjunctive of a lower level than its own.
- The other subdivisions within a phrase are constituted by the
"default" disjunctive for the next lower level (the "remote
companion").
- Any disjunctive may or may not be preceded by one or more
conjunctives, varying with the disjunctive in question.
- A disjunctive constituting a phrase on its own (i.e. not preceded
by either a near companion or a conjunctive) may be substituted by a
stronger disjunctive of the same level, called in the Table the
"equivalent isolated disjunctive".
Mehmet Okonsar
2011-03-14