Normalisation of the English Language
Normalisationis the fixing of the norms and standards of a language to protect it from corruption and change.
Type of Standard | Written Standard | Spoken Standard |
Time Limits | by the 17th c. | end of the 18th c. |
Sources | Language of Chaucer (the London Dialect) | · private letters; · speech of characters in drama; · references to speech be scholars. |
Peculiarities | 1. less stabilised than at later stage; 2. wide range of variation (spelling, gr. forms, syntactical patterns, choice of words, etc. ); 3. rivalry with Latin in the field of science, philosophy, didactics. | 1. As spoken standard the scholars considered the speech of educated people taught at school as “correct English”. This was the speech of London and that of Cambridge and Oxford Universities. |
The normalisation of the English language started in the 17th – 18th c. In 1710 Jonathan Swiftpublished in his journal “The Tatler” an article titled “A Proposal for Correcting, Improving and Ascertaining the English Tongue”. J. Swift was a purist (struggled for the purity of the language) and suggested that a body of scholars should gather to fix the rules of the language usage.
The Normalisation of the English language consisted in publishing:
1. Grammar’s of English:
· John Wallis, “Grammatica Lingæ Anglicanæ” (prescriptive/normative grammar);
· Robert Lowth, “A Short Introduction to English Grammar” (Lowth distinguished 9 parts of speech; made consistent description of letters, syllables, words and sentences; rules of no-double negation (I don’t want no dinner – incorrect!) and no-double comparison (more better – incorrect!) appeared, etc.).
2. Dictionaries(18th c.):
· E. Coles, “Dictionary of Hard Words” (gave explanations of hard words and phrases);
· Samuel Johnson– one of the best-known English lexicographers. As well as J. Swift, he was a purist and believed that the English language should be purified and corrected. He was the first to compile a dictionary that resembles the present-day dictionaries. His “Dictionary of the English Language” is the finest example of his hard and productive work. The dictionary is organised as follows:
- entry;
- pronunciation;
- definition;
- illustrations (not self-invented examples but quotations from recognised authors that contain the word in question);
- notes on usage of the word;
- etymology of the word;
- stylistic comments.
The dictionary also contained a grammatical section describing the grammatical structure of the language.
Lecture 10
Phonetic Features of Old English
OE sound system developed from PG sound system.
OE Word Stress/Accent:
1. fixed (can’t move either in form- or word-building and is usually placed on root or prefix);
2. dynamic(force, breath stress);
3.in Noun and Adjectivestress was mainly on the prefixif there was one:
E.g. ‘misdæd (misdeed), ‘uðζenζ (escape), ‘oreald (very old)
in Verbstress was mainly on the root even if there was a prefix:
E.g. a’risan (arise), mis’faran (go astray)
4.stress served to distinguish Noun from Verb (and still does):
E.g. ‘andswaru (N answer) – and’swarian (V answer)
‘onζin (N beginning) – on’ζinnan (V begin)
E.g. (modern English) – ‘present – pre’sent; ‘ally – al’ly.
OE Vowels
Unstressed vowelswere weakened and dropped.
Stressed vowelsunderwent some changes:
· splitting – 1 phoneme split into several allophones which later become separate phonemes
e.g. à a
a à ã
à æ
· merging– separate phonemes become allophones of one phoneme and then disappear and are not distinguished any more as separate phonemes
e.g. a à
ã à a
æ à
Rise of Diphthongs
In PG there were no diphthongs. There was just a sequence of two separate vowels. Diphthongs appeared in OE: some (usually long diphthongs) – as a result of merging of two vowels:
Sounds | Diphth. | Gothic | OE |
a + u à | ea: | auso | eare (ear) |
e + u à | eo: | þeudans | þēoden (king) |
(i + u)à | (io:) (dialectal variant) | diups | dīop (deep) |
others (usually short diphthongs) – as a result of the influence of the succeeding and preceding consonants (breaking of [æ, e]):
Monoph. | Diphth. | Influence | Gothic | OE |
æ à | ea | before l | alls | eall (all) |
æ à | ea | before h | ahtau | eahta (eight) |
e à | eo | before r | herza | heorte (heart) |
æ à | ea | after sk’/k’ | skadus | sceadu (shade) |
æ: à | ea: | after j | jâr | ζēar (year) |
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 (that’s why later it will be used for comparison).
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:
before palatal mutation | after palatal mutation | Gothic | OE |
a à o à æ à | e | badi | bedd (bed) |
a: à | æ: | dails | dælan (deal) |
ŏ/ō à | ĕ/ē | mōtjan | mētan (meet) |
ŭ/ū à | ŷ/ỹ(labialised) (new!) | fulljan | fyllan (fill) |
ĕă/ēā à ĕŏ/ēō à | ĭě/īē (new!) | eald (early OE) | ieldra (late OE) |
Traces of i-Umlaut in Modern English:
1. irregular Plural of nouns (man – men; tooth – teeth);
2. irregular verbs and adjectives (told ←tell; sold ←sell; old – elder);
3. word-formation with sound interchange (long – length; blood – bleed).
OE Vowel System(symmetrical, i.e each short vowel had its long variant)
Monophthongs | + | Diphthongs | ||||||||
Short | ĭ | ĕ | ă | ǽ | ŏ | ŭ | ŷ | ĕŏ | ĕă | ĭě |
Long | ī | ē | ā | æ | ō | ū | ỹ | ēō | ēā | īē |
The length of vowels was phonologically relevant (i.e. served to distinguish words):
e.g. (OE) is (is) – īs (ice); col (coal) –cōl (cool); god (god) – gōd (good), etc.
OE Consonants
OE consonants underwent the following changes:
1. Hardening (the process when a soft consonant becomes harder)– usually initially and after nasals ([m, n])
[ð] à | [d] | rauðr (Icelandic) | rēad (OE) (red) |
[v] à | [b] | - | - |
[γ] à | [g] | guma (Gothic) | ζuma (OE) (man) |
2. Voicing(the process when a voiceless consonant becomes voiced in certain positions) – intervocally and between a vowel and a voiced consonant or sonorant
[f, q, h, s] à [v, ð, g, z] e.g. wulfos (Gothic) – wulf[v]as (OE) (wolves)
3. Rhotacism(a process when [z] turns into [r])
e.g. maiza (Gothic) – māra (OE) (more)
4. Gemination(a process of doubling a consonant) – after a short vowel, usually happened as a result of palatal mutation (e.g. fullan (OE) (fill), settan (OE) (set), etc.).
5. Palatalisation of Consonants(a process when hard vowels become soft) – before a front vowel and sometimes also after a front vowel
[g, γ, k, h] à [g’, γ’, k’, h’]e.g. c[k’]ild (OE) (child); ecζ[gg’] (OE) (edge), etc.
6. Loss of Consonants:
· sonorants before fricatives (e.g. fimf (Gothic) – fīf (OE) (five));
· fricatives between vowels and some plosives (e.g. sæζde (early OE) – sæde (late OE) (said));
· loss of [j] – as a result of palatal mutation (see examples above);
· loss of [w] (e.g. case-forms of nouns: sæ (Nominative) – sæwe (Dative) (OE) (sea).
OE Consonant System
See table 9 on p. 90 in “История английского языка” by Т.А. Расторгуева (copies).
Lecture 11