
- •1№ 1. Germanic languages: their history & classification
- •Table. The classification of old & modern Germanic languages.
- •2. The common features of germanic languages
- •In phonetics:
- •In grammar:
- •In lexis:
- •3. The chronological division of the history of English.
- •4 The Scandinavian invasion and its effect on English.
- •5. Norman Conquest and its effect on English
- •6. The dialectial situation of english
- •Old English Dialects
- •7. Principal oe and me written records
- •8. Spelling changes in me
- •9. Oe sound system
- •Palatal Mutation/I-Umlaut
- •Velar Consonants in Early Old English. Growth of New Phonemes
- •10. Monophthongs in the history of english
- •Qualitative vowel changes in early middle english
- •11. Dipthongs
- •12.Consonant changes in the history of english.
- •Treatment of Fricative Consonants in me and Early ne
- •13. Form-building means in the histoey of english
- •14. Old english noun system
- •15. The Simplification of the Noun Declension in English
- •16. The development of personal pronouns in the history of English.
- •17 The Development of the Adjective
- •18.The development of demonstrative pronouns in the history of English .(Dem pron, their categories , declentions, the decay of declentions & gramm. Categ in Middle e, the rise of articles.)
- •19. The oe verb, its grammatical categories and morphological types.
- •Grammatical Categories oF the Finite Verb
- •20. Old English weak verbs and their further development
- •21. Strong verbs
- •22. Preterite-present and anomalous
- •23. Changes in the verb conjugation
- •25. Verbals in the history of English
- •Development of the Gerund
- •24. The rise of analytical forms in verbal system in me.
- •Category of Voice. Passive
- •Perfect Forms.
- •Interrogative and Negative Forms with do (ne)
- •26. Causes of Grammatical Changes
- •27. Oe syntax
- •28. English syntax.
- •29 Old English Vocabulary
- •30 Word-Formation in Old English
- •31. Borrowings Конспект French and Scandinavian Borrowings in English
9. Oe sound system
The OE sound system developed from the PG system. It underwent multiple changes in the pre-written periods of history, especially in Early OE.
In OE a syllable was made prominent by an increase in the force of articulation; in other words, a dynamic or a force stress was employed. In disyllabic and polysyllabic words the accent fell on the root-morpheme or on the first syllable. Word stress was fixed; it remained on the same syllable in different grammatical forms of the word and, as a rule, did not shift in word-building either.
OE Vowels
The OE vowel system shows 7 points of short and long vowels.
ī ĭ y (short and long) ŭū
ēĕ ōŏ
æ (short and l) ăā
The peculiarity of OE vowels: it showed full symmetry.
Length of vowels was phonological, that is to say it could distingyish different words: gōd (=good NE) and gŏd (god NE)
In ME the following changes occurred (14th c)
Short: Long:
i u i: u:
e o e: o:
a e: o:
a:
The number of short vowels decreased, instead of 7 we find 5 (y-i, æ – a) these vowels merged.
The main process that took place in long vowels was narrowing (ē → e: æ (long)→e: ŏ→o: ā→o:) . The origin of a: it developed from short a in open stressed syllables.
Palatal Mutation/I-Umlaut
Mutation – a change of one vowel to another one under the influence of a vowel in the following syllable.
Palatal mutation (or i-Umlaut) happened in the 6th -7th c. and was shared by all Old Germanic Languages, except Gothic. I-mutation is a change of root back vowels to front ones or root open vowels to closer ones under the influence of i/j in the next syllable.
Palatal mutation – fronting and raising of vowels under the influence of [i] and [j] in the following syllable (to approach the articulation of these two sounds). As a result of palatal mutation:
[i] and [j] disappeared in the following syllable sometimes leading to the doubling of a consonant in this syllable;
new vowels appeared in OE ([ie, y]) as a result of merging and splitting:
Traces of i-Umlaut in Modern English:
irregular Plural of nouns (man – men; tooth – teeth);
irregular verbs and adjectives (told ←tell; sold ←sell; old – elder);
word-formation with sound interchange (long – length; blood – bleed).
Breaking
Under the influence of succeeding and preceding consonants some Early OE monophthongs developed into diphthongs. If a front vowel stood before a velar consonant there developed a short glide between them, as the organs of speech prepared themselves for the transition from one sound to the other. The glide, together with the original monophthong formed a diphthong.
The front vowels [i] and [e] and the newly developed [æ], changed into diphthongs with a back glide when they stood before [h], before long (doubled) [ll] or [l] pJus another consonant, and before [r] plus other consonants, e.g.: OE deorc, NE dark. The change is known as breaking or fructure. Breaking is dated in Early OE, for in OE texts we find the process already completed.
Breaking produced a new set of vowels in OE — the short diphthongs [ea] and [eo[ they could enter the system as counterparts of'the long [ea:], [eo: ] which had developed from PG prototypes
Old English Consonant System
The system consisted of several correlated sets of consonants. All the consonants fell into noise consonants and sonorants. The noise consonants were subdivided into plosives and fricatives; plosives were further differentiated as voiced and voiceless, the difference being phonemic. The fricative consonants were also subdivided into voiced and voiceless; in this set, however, sonority was merely a phonetic difference. The opposition of palatal and velar lingual consonants [k] — [k'], [g]— [g'] had probably become phonemic by the time of the earliest written records It is noteworthy that among the OE consonants there were few sibilants (s,z) and no affricates.
The most universal distinctive feature in the consonant system was the difference in length. During the entire OE period long consonants are believed to have been opposed to short ones on a phonemic level; they were mostly distinguished in intervocal position. Single and long consonants are found in identical phonetic conditions.
Place of artic Manner |
labial |
dental |
palatal |
velar |
|
noise |
Plosive voiceless voiced |
p p: b b: |
t t: d d: |
k’ k’: g’: |
k k: g g: |
fricative voiceless voiced |
f f: v |
: s s: ð z:
|
x’ x’: y’ j |
x x: y |
|
sonorants |
m m: w |
n n: r l |
j |
gn |
Treatment of Fricatives. Hardening. Rhotacism. Voicing and Devoicing
The changes under Grimm's Law and Verner's Law PG had the following two sets of fricative consonants: voiceless [f, th, x, s] and voiced [v z y z]
In Early OE the difference between the two groups was supported by new features. PG voiced fricatives tended to be hardened to corresponding plosives while voiceless fricatives, being contrasted to them primarily as fricatives to plosives, developed new voiced allophones.
The PG voiced [ð] (due to Verner's Law or to the third act of the shift) was always hardened to [d ] in OE and other WG languages. The two other fricatives, [v] and [γ] were hardened to [b] and [g] initially and after nasals, otherwise they remained fricatives
Hardening (the process when a soft consonant becomes harder)– usually initially and after nasals ([m, n])
-
[ð]
[d]
rauðr (Icelandic)
rēad (OE) (red)
[v]
[b]
-
-
[γ]
[g]
guma (Gothic)
ζuma (OE) (man)
PG [z] underwent a phonetic modification through the stage [5] into [r] and thus became a sonorant, which ultimately merged with the older IE [r]. This process, termed rhotacism, is characteristic not only of WG but also of NG
In the meantime or somewhat later the PG set of voiceless fricatives [f, , h, s] and also those of the voiced fricatives which had not turned into plosives, that is, [v] and [y], were subjected to a new process of voicing and devoicing. In Early OE they became or remained voiced intervocally and between vowels, sonorants and voiced consonants; they remained or became voiceless in other environments, namely, initially, finally and next to other voiceless consonants.
The mutually exclusive phonetic conditions for voiced and voiceless fricatives prove that in OE they were not phonemes, but allophones.