
- •Lecture 1 First Consonant Shift (Grimm’s Law)
- •Second Consonant Shift (Old High German Consonant Shift)
- •Germanic lengthening of Consonants
- •Germanic Vowel Shift
- •Stress in Germanic languages
- •Periodization of the english language history
- •Old english vowel system
- •Front mutation (I-umlaut)
- •Back mutation (u-umlaut)
- •Breaking (fracture)
- •Contraction of vowel groups
- •Influence of palatalization
- •Changes in unstressed syllables
- •Changes of oe consonants
- •Voicing and unvoicing of fricatives
- •Palatalization
- •Metathesis
Stress in Germanic languages
The most important distinguishing feature of the Germanic languages was their word-stress. In Germanic, like in other Indo-European languages, it was free, that is it might fall on any part of a word. Later it has been replaced by a fixed stress falling regularly on the first syllable. The effect of this fixed stress was considerable for English: many important changes have taken place in unstressed syllables. They tended to become weakened and gradually were lost. All this led to crucial simplification in the system of English paradigm
Periodization of the english language history
OLD ENGLISH from 7th down to 1050 - the period of “full endings”
Transition Period from 1050 to 1150
MIDDLE ENGLISH from 1150 to 1500 – the period of “levelled endings”
EARLY MODERN ENGLISH from 1500 to 1660
MODERN ENGLISH from 1700 till the present – the period of “lost endings” (H.Sweet)
Old english vowel system
Front short vowels: i, e, y, æ Back short vowels: a, o, u Short diphthongs: ea, eo, ie, io
Front long vowels: ī, ē, y, æ Back long vowels: ā, ō, ū, å Long diphthongs: ēa, ēo, īe, īo
Front mutation (I-umlaut)
a > e (*framian > fremman виконувати)
æ > e (*tælian > telan говорити)
ā > æ (*lārian > læran вчити)
o > e (*ofstian > efstan поспішати)
ō > ē (*dōmian > dēman припускати, думати)
u > y (*fullian > fyllan заповнювати)
ū > y (cūþian > cyþan повідомляти)
Diphthongs:
ea > ie (*hleahian > hliehhan сміятися)
ēa > īe (*hēarian > hīeran слухати)
eo > ie (*āfeorrian > āfierran знищувати, прибирати)
ēo > īe (*3etrēowi > 3etrīewe вірний)
Back mutation (u-umlaut)
i > io (hira > hiora їхній, silufr > siolufr срібло)
e > eo (herot > heorot олень, hefon > heofon небеса)
a > ea (saru > searu лати)
Breaking (fracture)
e > ea before “r+cons.”, “l+cons.”, “h+cons.”, “h” in the final syllable (*ærm > earm, * æld > eald, * æhta > eahta)
e > eo before “r+cons.”, “h+cons.”, “lc, lh,”, “h” in the final syllable (*herte > heorte, *melcan > meolcan)
Contraction of vowel groups
1. “ah + vowel” > ēa (*slahan > slēan вбивати)
2. “eh + vowel”, “ih + vowel” > ēo (*sehan > sēon бачити *tihan > tēon звинувачувати)
3. “oh + vowel > ō (*fohan > fōn хапати)
4. ē and ō could absorb the following vowel (*sæē > sæ морю)
Influence of palatalization
OE front vowels could be diphthongized when preceded by palatal consonants 3, c, and other vowels – by cluster sc:
e > ie (*3efan > 3iefan давати)
æ > ea (*3æf > 3eaf дав)
æ > ēa ( *3æfon > 3ēafon дав)
a > ea (*scacan > sceacan трусити)
o > eo (*scort > sceort короткий)
.Vowel lengthening
In the 9th century short vowels were lengthened before the clusters nd, mb, ld, rd:
OE: bindan > bīndan (to bind)
climban > clīmban (to climb)
cild > cīld (child)
If nd, mb, ld, rd were followed by a third consonant the lengthening didn’t take place:
OE: cild > cīld (child), but cildru (children)