Old and Middle English Phonology

D. Minkova
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Abstract

Old English (OE) is a cover term for a variety of dialects spoken in Britain ca. 5th–11th century. Most of the manuscripts on which the descriptive handbook tradition relies date from the latter part of the period. These late OE manuscripts were produced in Wessex and show a degree of uniformity interrupted by the Norman Conquest of 1066. Middle English (ME) covers roughly 1050–1500. The early part of the period, ca. pre-1350, is marked by great diversity of scribal practices; it is only in late ME that some degree of orthographic regularity can be observed. The consonantal system of OE differs from the Modern English system. Consonantal length was contrastive, there were no affricates, no voicing contrast for the fricatives [f, θ, s], no phonemic velar nasal [ŋ], and [h-] loss was under way. In the vocalic system, OE shows changes that identify it as a separate branch of Germanic: Proto-Germanic (PrG) ē 1 > OE ǣ/ē, PrG ai > OE ā, PrG au > OE ēa. The non-low short vowels of OE are reconstructed as non-peripheral, differing from the corresponding long vowels both in quality and quantity. The so called “short” diphthongs usually posited for OE suggest a case for which a strict binary taxonomy is inapplicable to the data. The OE long vowels and diphthongs were unstable, producing a number of important mergers including /iː - yː/, /eː - eø/, /ɛː - ɛə/. In addition to shifts in height and frontness, the stressed vowels were subject to a series of quantity adjustments that resulted in increased predictability of vowel length. The changes that jointly contribute to this are homorganic cluster lengthening, ME open syllable lengthening, pre-consonantal and trisyllabic shortening. The final unstressed vowels of ME were gradually lost, resulting in the adoption of <-e># as a diacritic marker for vowel length. Stress-assignment was based on a combination of morphological and prosodic criteria: root-initial stress was obligatory irrespective of syllable weight, while affixal stress was also sensitive to weight. Verse evidence allows the reconstruction of left-prominent compound stress; there is also some early evidence for the formation of clitic groups. Reconstruction of patterns on higher prosodic levels—phrasal and intonational contours—is hampered by lack of testable evidence.
古英语和中古英语音韵学
古英语(OE)是约5 - 11世纪在英国使用的各种方言的统称。描述手册传统所依赖的大部分手稿都是在这一时期的后期完成的。这些后期的OE手稿是在威塞克斯制作的,显示出一定程度的一致性,被1066年的诺曼征服打断了。中古英语(ME)大约涵盖了1050-1500年。这一时期的早期,大约在1350年之前,以各种各样的抄写方式为特征;只有在ME晚期,才可以观察到某种程度的正字法规则。OE的辅音系统不同于现代英语系统。辅音长度是对比的,没有消舌音,没有摩擦音[f, θ, s]的发音对比,没有音位的舌鼻音[k], [h-]的丢失正在进行中。在语音系统中,OE表现出的变化使其成为日耳曼语的一个独立分支:原日耳曼语(PrG) æ 1 > OE´/ / æ, PrG ai > OE´,PrG au > OE ēa。OE的非低短元音被重构为非外围元音,与相应的长元音在质量和数量上都有所不同。通常假定用于OE的所谓“短”双元音表明严格的二进制分类法不适用于数据的情况。英语的长元音和双元音不稳定,产生了许多重要的合并,包括/i / - y /, /e / - eø/, /i / - e /。除了高度和正面的变化外,重读元音还受到一系列数量调整的影响,从而增加了元音长度的可预测性。共同促成这一变化的是同质集群延长,ME开音节延长,前辅音和三音节缩短。ME的最后非重读元音逐渐丢失,导致采用#作为元音长度的变音符标记。重音分配是基于形态学和韵律标准的结合:无论音节的重量如何,词根的重音都是强制性的,而词缀的重音也对重量很敏感。诗歌证据允许重建左突出的复合重音;也有一些关于气候群形成的早期证据。由于缺乏可测试的证据,在更高韵律水平上的模式重建——短语和语调轮廓——受到了阻碍。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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