Tsinnorit is a new name for an accent to me. I have always found the usage of the accent names inconsistent in all the books I have read (or seen and not read). The name is probably in some of the books I have looked at but I may not have noted it. Nonetheless, confusion or not, there is a pattern here, and it may lead to some insight into the mind of the ancient designer. Definitely the sign ֮seen above as a sideways s often leads to a particular note. (But its not quite that simple).
Here's a collection of tsinnorit resolving to the supertonic.
Job 20:27 - tsinnorit (on the recitation pitch A) to mercha (f# in the poetry mode -- bars 29-30) preceding the final cadence on the tonic e |
Psalms 118:25 - tsinnorit to f# twice: first from the reciting note on the third of the scale (bar 148) and before the subdominant A and again from reciting note f# before the final cadence on e |
I see 17 additional examples in the poetry and that's all for the sequence tsinnorit-mercha. Mercha occurs independently also. The ornament preceding the f# may come on the reciting pitch A, g, or f# as seen above, and also on e and even from C (once) as in the following image.
Psalms 72:3 - shalshelet (bar 13) lifts up to tsinnorit on the reciting note C before the subdominant (bar 15) |
The following is an example of tsinnorit joined to the high C. This combination occurs 168 times in my data at present. and the sequence is often tsinnorit followed by C at the beginning of the verse. I had noticed these in previous years (even when I was following Unicode and miscalling it zarqa) because this ornament is often a help to the singer to get to the high note.
Proverbs 8:29 - getting to the high note by way of a tsinnorit. |
There are 12 other instances in the poetry of tsinnor (not tsinnorit) preceding f#. There are 180 examples of tsinnor preceding d (galgal), 31 examples preceding e, and 22 preceding C, see Psalms 49:15 below.
Psalms 49:15 containing both tsinnor and tsinnorit prior to C (mahpakh) |
These are clearly different in WLC and its font. Not so clear in mgketer. There are an additional 22 instances of tsinnor with mahpakh following. I don't think the music is significantly different to try to verify these details. Here are the two in copy and paste form -- just highlighting the different placements over the letters.
mgketer.org שַׁתּוּ֮ וַיִּרְדּ֮וּ
tanach.us שַׁתּוּ֮ וַיִּרְדּ֘וּ
Anyway: I can see that this turn wherever it is placed on the letter often immediately precedes mahpakh which Haïk-Vantoura deciphers as the 6th above the tonic, C in her renderings of the pitches. It makes musical sense no matter which turn is sung. And the similar turn called zarqa and tsinnor may also resolve to d or e in the poetry books.
One more example.
Psalms 16:11 tsinnor preceding C (bar 64) |