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Phonological history of Old English

The phonological system of the Old English language underwent many changes during the period of its existence. These included a number of vowel shifts, and the palatalisation of velar consonants in many positions.

For historical developments prior to the Old English period, see Proto-Germanic language.

Phonetic transcription Edit

Various conventions are used below for describing Old English words, reconstructed parent forms of various sorts and reconstructed Proto-West-Germanic (PWG), Proto-Germanic (PG) and Proto-Indo-European (PIE) forms:

  • Forms in italics denote either Old English words as they appear in spelling or reconstructed forms of various sorts. Where phonemic ambiguity occurs in Old English spelling, extra diacritics are used (ċ, ġ, ā, ǣ, ē, ī, ō, ū, ȳ).
  • Forms between /slashes/ or [brackets] indicate, respectively, broad (phonemic) or narrow (allophonic) pronunciation. Sounds are indicated using standard IPA notation.

The following table indicates the correspondence between spelling and pronunciation transcribed in the International Phonetic Alphabet. For details of the relevant sound systems, see Proto-Germanic phonology and Old English phonology.

Sound Spelling Pronunciation
Short vowels o e etc. /o e/ etc.
Short nasal vowels ǫ ę etc. ẽ/ etc.
Long vowels ō ē etc. /oː eː/ etc.
Long nasal vowels ǭ ę̄ etc. /õː ẽː/ etc.
Overlong vowels ô ê /oːː eːː/
Overlong nasal vowels ǫ̂ ę̂ /õːː ẽːː/
"Long" diphthongs ēa ēo īo īe /æːɑ eːo iːu iːy/
"Short" diphthongs ea eo io ie /æɑ eo iu iy/
Old English unpalatalized velars1 c sc g ng gg /k sk/ ŋɡ ɡ]
Old English palatalized velars1 ċ ġ ċġ /tʃ ʃ/ [j ndʒ ddʒ]
Proto-Germanic velars1 k sk g; sometimes also ɣ /k sk/ ɣ]
Proto-Germanic voiced stops/fricatives1 b d g; sometimes also β, ð or đ, ɣ [b~β] [d~ð] [ɡ~ɣ]

1Proto-Germanic /b d ɡ/ had two allophones each: stops [b d ɡ] and fricatives ð ɣ]. The stops occurred:

  1. following a nasal;
  2. when geminated;
  3. word-initially, for /b/ and /d/ only;
  4. following /l/, for /d/ only.

By West Germanic times, /d/ was pronounced as a stop [d] in all positions. The fricative allophones are sometimes indicated in reconstructed forms to make it easier to understand the development of Old English consonants. Old English retained the allophony [ɡ~ɣ], which in case of palatalisation (see below) became [dʒ~j]. Later, non-palatalized [ɣ] became [ɡ] word-initially. The allophony [b~β] was broken when [β] merged with [v], the voiced allophone of /f/.

Phonological processes Edit

A number of phonological processes affected Old English in the period before the earliest documentation. The processes affected especially vowels and are the reason that many Old English words look significantly different from related words in languages such as Old High German, which is much closer to the common West Germanic ancestor of both languages. The processes took place chronologically in roughly the order described below (with uncertainty in ordering as noted).

Absorption of nasals before fricatives Edit

This is the source of such alternations as modern English five, mouth, us versus German fünf, Mund, uns. For detail see Ingvaeonic nasal spirant law.

First a-fronting Edit

The Anglo-Frisian languages underwent a sound change in their development from Proto-West-Germanic by which ā [ɑː], unless followed by /n, m/ or nasalized, was fronted to ǣ [æː].[1] This was similar to the later process affecting short a, which is known as Anglo-Frisian brightening or First Fronting (see below). Nasalized ą̄ and the sequences ān, ām were unaffected and were later raised to ǭ, ōn, ōm (see below). (This may be taken to imply that a nasal consonant n, m caused a preceding long vowel to nasalise.) In the non-West-Saxon dialects of English (including the Anglian dialect underlying Modern English) the fronted vowel was further raised to ē [eː]: W.S. slǣpan, sċēap (< Proto-West-Germanic *slāpąn, *skāpă < Proto-Germanic *slēpaną, skēpą) versus Anglian slēpan, sċēp. The Modern English descendants sleep and sheep reflect the Anglian vowel; the West Saxon words would have developed to *sleap, *sheap.

The vowel affected by this change, which is reconstructed as being a low back vowel ā [ɑː] in Proto-West-Germanic, was the reflex of Proto-Germanic /ɛː/. It is possible that in Anglo-Frisian, Proto-Germanic /ɛː/ simply remained a front vowel, developing to Old English ǣ or ē without ever passing through an intermediate stage as the back vowel [ɑː].[2] However, borrowings such as Old English strǣt from Latin strāta (via) and the backing to ō before nasals are much easier to explain under the assumption of a common West Germanic stage .

Monophthongization Edit

Proto-Germanic /ai/ was monophthongized (smoothed) to /aː/ ([ɑː]).[3] This occurred after first a-fronting. For example, Proto-Germanic *stainaz became Old English stān (modern stone) (cf. Old Frisian stēn vs. Gothic stáin, Old High German stein). In many cases, the resulting [ɑː] was later fronted to [æː] by i-mutation: dǣlan "to divide" (cf. Old Frisian dēla vs. Gothic dáiljan, Old High German teilen [Modern English deal]). It is possible that this monophthongization occurred via the height harmonisation that produced the other diphthongs in Old English (presumably through an intermediate stage: /ai/ > [ɑæ] > /aː/).

Second a-fronting Edit

The second part of a-fronting, called Anglo-Frisian brightening or First Fronting, is very similar to the first part except that it affects short a instead of long ā. Here a [ɑ] is fronted to æ [æ] unless followed by /n, m/ or nasalized, the same conditions as applied in the first part.[4]

Importantly, a-fronting was blocked by n, m only in stressed syllables, not unstressed syllables, which accounts for forms like ġefen (formerly ġefæn) "given" from Proto-Germanic *gebanaz. However, the infinitive ġefan retains its back vowel due to a-restoration (see the explanation given in that section for the similar case of faren vs. faran).

Diphthong height harmonisation Edit

Proto-Germanic had the closing diphthongs /ai, au, eu/ (and [iu], an allophone of /eu/ when an /i/ or /j/ followed in the next syllable). In Old English, these (except /ai/, which had been monophthongised, as noted above) developed into diphthongs of a generally less common type in which both elements are of the same height, called height-harmonic diphthongs. This process is called diphthong height harmonisation. Specifically:

  • /au/ [ɑu] underwent a-fronting to /æu/ and was then harmonised to /æːɑ/, spelled ea (or in modern texts ēa).
  • /eu/ [eu] was harmonised to /eːo/, spelled eo (or in modern texts ēo).
  • [iu] was already harmonic; it became a separate phoneme /iːu/[who?], spelled io (or in modern texts īo). (This interpretation is somewhat controversial; see below.)

Old English diphthongs also arose from other later processes, such as breaking, palatal diphthongisation, back mutation and i-mutation, which also gave an additional diphthong ie /iy/. The diphthongs could occur both short (monotonic) /æa, eo, iu, iy/[who?] and long /æːa, eːo, iːu, iːy/.

Some sources reconstruct other phonetic forms that are not height-harmonic for some or all of these Old English diphthongs. The first elements of ēa, ēo, īo are generally accepted to have had the qualities [æ], [e], [i] (evidence for these qualities comes from the behaviour of breaking and back mutation as described below; the Middle English development of short ea into /a/ could also provide some evidence for the phonetic realisation of ēa). However, the interpretations of the second elements of these diphthongs are more varied. There are analyses that treat all of these diphthongs as ending in a schwa sound [ə]; i.e. ēa, ēo, īo = [æə], [eə], [iə] .[5] For io and ie, the height-harmonic interpretations /iu/ and /iy/[who?] are controversial, with many (especially more traditional) sources assuming that the pronunciation matched the spelling (/io/, /ie/), and hence that these diphthongs were of the opening rather than the height-harmonic type. In Early West Saxon, and later in Anglian io (both long and short) merged with eo.

Breaking and retraction Edit

Vowel breaking in Old English is the diphthongization of the short front vowels /i, e, æ/ to short diphthongs /iu, eo, æɑ/ when followed by /x/, /w/ or by /r/ or /l/ plus another consonant.[6] Long /iː, æː/ similarly broke to /iːu, æːa/, but only when followed by /x/. The geminates rr and ll usually count as r or l plus another consonant, but breaking does not occur before ll produced by West Germanic gemination (the /i/ or /j/ in the following syllable prevents breaking).

/iu, iːu/ were lowered to /eo, eːo/ in Early West Saxon and late Anglian (see above).

The exact conditions for breaking vary somewhat depending on the sound being broken:

  • Short /æ/ breaks before h, rC, lC, where C is any consonant.
  • Short /e/ breaks before h, rC, lh, lc, w, i.e. compared to /æ/ it is also broken before w, but is broken before l only in the combination lh and sometimes lc.
  • Short /i/ breaks before h, rC, w. However, it does not break before wi, and in the Anglian dialects breaking before rCi happens only in the combination *rzi (e.g. Anglian iorre "anger" from *irziją but afirran from *a+firrijaną).
  • Long ī and ǣ break only before h.

Examples:

  • weorpan [ˈweorpɑn] "to throw" < */ˈwerpan/
  • wearp [wæɑrp] "threw (sing.)" < */wærp/
  • feoh [feox] "money" < */feh/
  • feaht [fæaxt] "fought (sing.)" < */fæht/
  • healp [hæaɫp] "helped (sing.)" < */hælp/ (but no breaking in helpan "to help" because the consonant after /l/ is not /h/)
  • feorr [feorr] "far" < */ferr/
  • feallan [ˈfæɑllɑn] "to fall" < */ˈfællan/ (but tellan < earlier */ˈtælljan/ is not broken because of the following /j/)
  • eolh [eoɫx] "elk" < */elh/
  • liornian, leornian [ˈliurniɑn], [ˈleorniɑn] "to learn" < earlier */ˈlirnoːjan/
  • nēah "near" [næːɑx] (cf. "nigh") < */næːh/
  • lēon "to lend" [leːon] < */liːun/ < */ˈliuhan/ < */ˈliːhan/

The i-mutation of broken /iu, eo, æa/ (whether long or short) is spelled ie (possibly /iy/, see above).

Examples:

  • hwierfþ "turns" (intr.) < /ˈhwiurfiθ/ + i-mutation < /ˈhwirfiθ/ + breaking < Proto-Germanic *hwirbiþi < early Proto-Germanic *hwerbiþi
  • hwierfan "to turn" (tr.) < /ˈhwæarfijan/ + i-mutation < /ˈhwærfijan/ + breaking < /ˈhwarfijan/ + a-fronting < Proto-Germanic *hwarbijaną
  • nīehst "nearest" (cf. "next") < /ˈnæːahist/ + i-mutation < /ˈnæːhist/ + breaking < /ˈnaːhist/ + a-fronting < Proto-Germanic *nēhist
  • līehtan "to lighten" < /ˈliːuhtijan/ + i-mutation < /ˈliːhtijan/ + breaking < Proto-Germanic *līhtijaną

Note that in some dialects /æ/ was backed (retracted) to /a/ ([ɑ]) rather than broken, when occurring in the circumstances described above that would normally trigger breaking. This happened in the dialect of Anglia that partially underlies Modern English, and explains why Old English ceald appears as Modern English "cold" (actually from Anglian Old English cald) rather than "*cheald" (the expected result of ceald).

Both breaking and retraction are fundamentally phenomena of assimilation to a following velar consonant. While /w/ is in fact a velar consonant, /h/, /l/, and /r/ are less obviously so. It is therefore assumed that, at least at the time of the occurrence of breaking and retraction (several hundred years before recorded Old English), /h/ was pronounced [x] or similar – at least when following a vowel – and /l/ and /r/ before a consonant had a velar or retroflex quality and were already pronounced [ɫ] and [rˠ], or similar.

A-restoration Edit

After breaking occurred, short /æ/ (and in some dialects long /æː/ as well) was backed to /a/ ([ɑ]) when there was a back vowel in the following syllable.[7] This is called a-restoration, because it partly restored original /a/, which had earlier been fronted to /æ/ (see above). (Note: The situation is complicated somewhat by a later change called second fronting, but this did not affect the standard West Saxon dialect of Old English.)

Because strong masculine and neuter nouns have back vowels in plural endings, alternations with /æ/ in the singular vs. /a/ in the plural are common in this noun class:

/æ/~/a/ alternation in masculine and neuter strong nouns
Case Masculine Neuter
Singular Plural Singular Plural
Nominative and Accusative dæġ dagas fæt fatu
Genitive dæġes daga fætes fata
Dative dæġe dagum fæte fatum

A-restoration occurred before the *ō of the weak verb suffix *-ōj-, although this surfaces in Old English as the front vowel i, as in macian "to make" < *makōjan-.

Breaking (see above) occurred between a-fronting and a-restoration. This order is necessary to account for words like slēan "to slay" (pronounced /slæːɑn/) from original *slahan: /ˈslahan/ > /ˈslæhan/ (a-fronting) > /ˈslæɑhɑn/ (breaking; inhibits a-restoration) > /ˈslæɑ.ɑn/ (h-loss) > /slæːɑn/ (vowel coalescence, compensatory lengthening).

A-restoration interacted in a tricky fashion with a-fronting (Anglo-Frisian brightening) to produce e.g. faran "to go" from Proto-Germanic *faraną but faren "gone" from Proto-Germanic *faranaz. Basically:

Step "to go" "gone" Reason
1 *faraną *faranaz original form
2 *farana loss of final z
3 *faræną *farænæ Anglo-Frisian brightening
4 *faraną a-restoration
5 *faran *faræn loss of final short vowels
6 faran faren collapse of unstressed short front vowels to /e/

Note that the key difference is in steps 3 and 4, where nasalised ą is unaffected by a-fronting even though the sequence an is in fact affected, since it occurs in an unstressed syllable. This leads to a final-syllable difference between a and æ, which is transferred to the preceding syllable in step 4. The presence of back a in the stem of both forms is not directly explainable by sound change, and appears to have been the result of simple analogical levelling.

Palatalization Edit

Palatalization of the velar consonants /k/ and /ɡ/ occurred in certain environments, mostly involving front vowels. (The phoneme /ɡ/ at that time had two allophones: [ɡ] after /n/ or when geminated, and [ɣ] everywhere else.) This palatalisation is similar to what occurred in Italian and Swedish. When palatalised:

  • /k/ became /tʃ/
  • /sk/ became /ʃ/
  • [ɡ] became [dʒ]
  • [ɣ] became [ʝ] (a voiced palatal fricative; it would later become [j], but not before the loss of older /j/ in certain positions discussed below)

The contexts for palatalisation were sometimes different for different sounds:

  • Before /i, iː, j/, for example:
    • ċīdan ("to chide"), bēċ ("books", from earlier *bōkiz/), sēċan ("seek", from earlier *sōkijaną) (/k/ > /tʃ/)
    • bryċġ ("bridge", from earlier West Germanic *ˈbruɡɡju after Proto-Germanic *brugjō) ([ɡɡ] > [ddʒ])
    • ġiefþ ("gives") ([ɣ] > [j])
  • Before other front vowels and diphthongs, in the case of word-initial /k/ and all [ɣ], for example:
    • ċeorl ("churl"), ċēas ("chose (sg.)"), ċeald ("cold") (initial /k/ > /tʃ/)
    • ġeaf /jæf/ ("gave"), ġeard ("yard") ([ɣ] > [j])
  • After /i/, /iː/ (possibly with an intervening /n/), unless a back vowel followed, for example:
    • ("I"), dīċ ("ditch, dike") (/k/ > /tʃ/)
    • In wicu ("week"), the /k/ is not affected due to the following /u/
  • For [ɣ] and /sk/ only, after other front vowels (/e/, /eː/, /æ/, /æː/), unless a back vowel followed, for example:
    • weġ ("way"), næġl("nail"), mǣġ ("relative") ([ɣ] > [j])
    • fisċ ("fish") (/sk/ > /ʃ/)
    • In wegas ("ways") the [ɣ] is not affected due to the following /ɑ/
    • In āscian ("ask", from earlier *aiskōjaną) the /sk/ remains due to the /ō/
  • For word-initial /sk/, always, even when followed by a back vowel or /r/,[8] for example:
    • sċip ("ship"), sċuldor ("shoulder"), sċort ("short"), sċrūd ("dress", giving modern shroud) (/sk/ > /ʃ/)

The palatals /tʃ/ and [dʒ] reverted to their non-palatal equivalents /k/ and /g/ when they came to stand immediately before a consonant, even if this occurred at a significantly later period, as when *sēċiþ ("seeks") became sēcþ, and *senġiþ ("singes") became sengþ.

Palatalization occurred after a-restoration and before i-mutation (although it is unclear whether it occurred before or after h-loss). Thus, it did not occur in galan "to sing" (cf. modern English regale), with the first /a/ backed from /æ/ due to a-restoration. Similarly, palatalisation occurred in dæġ ("day"), but not in a-restored dagas ("days"; cf. dialectal English dawes "days") or in dagung ("dawn", where the ⟨w⟩ represents the reflex of unpalatalised [ɣ]). Nor did it occur in cyning ("king"), cemban ("to comb") or gēs ("geese"), where the front vowels /y, e, eː/ developed from earlier /u, a, oː/ due to i-mutation.

In many instances where a ċ/c, ġ/g, or sċ/sc alternation would be expected within a paradigm, it was levelled out by analogy at some point in the history of the language. For example, the velar of sēcþ "he seeks" has replaced the palatal of sēċan "to seek" in Modern English; on the other hand, the palatalised forms of besēċan have replaced the velar forms, giving modern beseech.

The sounds /k~tʃ/ and /ɡ~j/ had almost certainly split into distinct phonemes by Late West Saxon, the dialect in which the majority of Old English documents are written. This is suggested by such near-minimal pairs as drincan [ˈdriŋkɑn] ("drink") vs. drenċan [ˈdrentʃɑn] ("drench"), and gēs [ɡeːs] ("geese") vs. ġē [jeː] ("you"). Nevertheless, there are few true minimal pairs, and velars and palatals often alternate with each other in ways reminiscent of allophones, for example:

  • ċēosan [ˈtʃeːozan] ("to choose") vs. curon [ˈkuron] ("chose", plural form)
  • ġēotan [ˈjeːotan] ("to pour") vs. guton [ˈɡuton] ("poured", plural form)

The voiced velars [ɡ] and [ɣ] were still allophones of a single phoneme (although by now [ɡ] was the form used in initial position); similarly, their respective palatalised reflexes [dʒ] and [j] are analysed as allophones of a single phoneme /j/ at this stage. This /j/ also included older instances of [j] which derived from Proto-Germanic /j/, and could stand before back vowels, as in ġeong /junɡ/ ("young"; from PGmc *jungaz) and ġeoc /jok/ ("yoke"; from PGmc *juką). (See also Old English phonology: dorsal consonants.)

Standard Old English spelling did not reflect the split, and used the same letter ⟨c⟩ for both /k/ and /tʃ/, and ⟨g⟩ for both /ɡ/ ([ɡ], [ɣ]) and /j/ ([j], [dʒ]). In the standard modernised orthography (as used here), the velar and palatal variants are distinguished with a diacritic: ⟨c⟩ stands for /k/, ⟨ċ⟩ for /tʃ/, ⟨g⟩ for [ɡ] and [ɣ], and ⟨ġ⟩ for [j] and [dʒ]. The geminates of these are written ⟨cc⟩, ⟨ċċ⟩, ⟨cg⟩, ⟨ċġ⟩.

Loanwords from Old Norse typically do not display any palatalisation, showing that at the time they were borrowed the palatal–velar distinction was no longer allophonic and the two sets were now separate phonemes. Compare, for example, the modern doublet shirt and skirt; these both derive from the same Germanic root, but shirt underwent Old English palatalisation, whereas skirt comes from a Norse borrowing which did not. Similarly, give, an unpalatalised Norse borrowing, existed alongside (and eventually displaced) the regularly palatalised yive. Other later loanwords similarly escaped palatalisation: compare ship (from palatalised Old English sċip) with skipper (borrowed from unpalatalised Dutch schipper).[9]

Second fronting Edit

Second fronting fronted /a/ to /æ/, and /æ/ to /e/, later than related processes of a-fronting and a-restoration.[10] Second fronting did not affect the standard West Saxon dialect of Old English. In fact, it took place only in a relatively small section of the area (English Midlands) where the Mercian dialect was spoken. Mercian itself was a subdialect of the Anglian dialect (which includes all of Central and Northern England).

Palatal diphthongization Edit

The front vowels e, ē, æ, and ǣ usually become the diphthongs ie, īe, ea, and ēa after ċ, ġ, and :[11]

  • sċieran "to cut", sċear "cut (past sing.)", sċēaron "cut (past pl.)", which belongs to the same conjugation class (IV) as beran "to carry", bær "carried (sing.)", bǣron "carried (pl.)"
  • ġiefan "to give", ġeaf "gave (sing.)", ġēafon "gave (pl.)", ġiefen "given", which belongs to the same conjugation class (V) as tredan "to tread", træd "trod (sing.)", trǣdon "trod (pl.)", treden "trodden"

In a similar way, the back vowels u, o, and a were spelled as eo and ea after ċ, ġ, and :

  • *ġung > ġeong "young" (cf. German jung)
  • *sċolde > sċeolde "should" (cf. German sollte)
  • *sċadu > sċeadu "shadow" (cf. Dutch schaduw)

Most likely, the second process was simply a spelling convention, and a, o, u actually did not change in pronunciation: the vowel u continued to be pronounced in ġeong, o in sċeolde, and a in sċeadu. This is suggested by their developments in Middle and Modern English. If ġeong and sċeolde had the diphthong eo, they would develop into Modern English *yeng and *sheeld instead of young and should.

There is less agreement about the first process. The traditional view is that e, ē, æ, and ǣ actually became diphthongs,[12][13] but a minority view is that they remained as monophthongs:[14]

  • sċieran [ˈʃerɑn]
  • sċear [ʃær]
  • sċēaron [ˈʃæːron]
  • ġiefan [ˈjevɑn]
  • ġeaf [jæf]
  • ġēafon [ˈjæːvon]
  • ġiefen [ˈjeven]

The main arguments in favour of this view are the fact that the corresponding process involving back vowels is indeed purely orthographic, and that diphthongizations like /æ/[æɑ] and /e/[iy] (if this, contrary to the traditional view, is the correct interpretation of orthographic ie) are phonetically unmotivated in the context of a preceding palatal or postalveolar consonant. In addition, both some advocates of the traditional view of ie and some advocates of the interpretation [iy] believe that the i in ie after palatal consonants never expressed a separate sound. Thus, it has been argued that the [iy] pronunciation only applied to the instances of ie expressing the sound resulting from i-mutation.[15] In any case, it is thought plausible that the two merged as [iə̆] at a fairly early stage.[15]

Metathesis of r Edit

Original sequences of an r followed by a short vowel metathesized, with the vowel and r switching places. This normally only occurred when the next following consonant was s or n, and sometimes d. The r could be initial or follow another consonant, but not a vowel.

  • Before s: berstan "to burst" (Icelandic bresta), gærs "grass" (Gothic gras), þerscan "to thresh" (Gothic þriskan)
  • Before n: byrnan ~ beornan "to burn (intr.)" (Gothic brinnan), irnan "to run" (Gothic rinnan), īren "iron" (< *īsren < īsern; Gothic eisarn), wærna "wren" (Icelandic rindill), ærn "house" (Gothic razn)
  • Before d: þirda "third" (Gothic þridja), Northumbrian bird "chick, nestling" (standard bryd)

Not all potential words to which metathesis can apply are actually affected, and many of the above words also appear in their unmetathesized form (e.g. græs "grass", rinnan "to run", wrenna "wren", rare forms brustæn "burst (past part.)", þrescenne "to thresh", onbran "set fire to (past)", īsern "iron", ren- "house", þridda "third"; briddes "birds" in Chaucer). Many of the words have come down to Modern English in their unmetathesized forms.

Metathesis in the other direction occasionally occurs before ht, e.g. wrohte "worked" (cf. obsolescent wrought; Gothic wurhta), Northumbrian breht ~ bryht "bright" (Gothic baírhts), fryhto "fright" (Gothic faúrhtei), wryhta "maker" (cf. wright; Old Saxon wurhtio). Unmetathesized forms of all of these words also occur in Old English. The phenomenon occurred in most Germanic languages.

I-mutation (i-umlaut) Edit

 
Development of Old English vowels under i-mutation.

Like most other Germanic languages, Old English underwent a process known as i-mutation or i-umlaut. This involved the fronting or raising of vowels under the influence of /i(ː)/ or /j/ in the following syllable. Among its effects were the new front rounded vowels /y(ː), ø(ː)/, and likely the diphthong /iy/ (see above). The original following /i(ː)/ or /j/ that triggered the umlaut was often lost at a later stage. The umlaut is responsible for such modern English forms as men, feet, mice (compare the singulars man, foot, mouse), elder, eldest (compare old), fill (compare full), length (compare long), etc.

For details of the changes, see Germanic umlaut, and particularly the section on i-mutation in Old English.

Medial syncopation Edit

In medial syllables, short low and mid vowels (/a, æ, e/) are deleted in all open syllables.[16]

Short high vowels (/i, u/) are deleted in open syllables following a long syllable, but usually remain following a short syllable; this is part of the process of high vowel loss.

Syncopation of low/mid vowels occurred after i-mutation and before high vowel loss. An example demonstrating that it occurred after i-mutation is mæġden "maiden":

Stage Process Result
Proto-Germanic Original form *magadīną
Final a-loss *magadīn
Anglo-Frisian Anglo-Frisian brightening *mægædīn
Palatalization *mæġædīn
I-mutation *mæġedīn
Medial syncopation *mæġdīn
Old English Unstressed vowel reduction mæġden

If the syncopation of short low/mid vowels had occurred before i-mutation, the result in Old English would be **meġden.

An example showing that syncopation occurred before high vowel loss is sāw(o)l "soul":

  • PG *saiwalō > *sāwalu > *sāwlu (medial syncopation) > sāwl "soul". (By-form sāwol is due to vowel epenthesis.)

Had it occurred after high vowel loss, the result in Old English would be **sāwlu.

High vowel loss Edit

In an unstressed open syllable, /i/ and /u/ (including final /-u/ from earlier /-oː/) were lost when following a long syllable (i.e. one with a long vowel or diphthong, or followed by two consonants), but not when following a short syllable (i.e. one with a short vowel followed by a single consonant).[17] This took place in two types of contexts:

  1. Absolutely word-final
  2. In a medial open syllable
Word-final

High-vowel loss caused many paradigms to split depending on the length of the root syllable, with -u or -e (from *-i) appearing after short but not long syllables. For example,

  • feminine ō-stem nouns in the nom. sg.: PG *gebō > OE ġiefu "gift" but PG *laizō > OE lār "teaching";
  • neuter a-stem nouns in the nom./acc. pl.: PG *skipō > OE scipu "ships" but PG *wurdō > OE word "words";
  • masculine i-stem nouns in the nom./acc. sg.: PG *winiz > OE wine "friend" but PG *gastiz > OE ġiest "guest";
  • u-stem nouns in the nom./acc. sg.: PG *sunuz > OE sunu "son" but PG *handuz > OE hand "hand";
  • strong adjectives in the feminine nom. sg. and neuter nom./acc. pl.: PG *tilō > OE tilu "good (fem. nom. sg., neut. nom./acc. pl.)" but PG *gōdō > OE gōd "good (fem. nom. sg., neut. nom./acc. pl.)";
  • weak class 1 imperatives: OE freme "perform!" vs. hīer "hear!" (PG stems *frami- and *hauzi-, respectively; it's unclear if the imperatives ended in *-i or *).

This loss affected the plural of root nouns, e.g. PrePG *pōdes > PG *fōtiz > *fø̄ti > OE fēt "feet (nom.)". All such nouns had long-syllable stems, and so all were without ending in the plural, with the plural marked only by i-mutation.

Two-syllable nouns consisting of two short syllables were treated as if they had a single long syllable — a type of equivalence found elsewhere in the early Germanic languages, e.g. in the handling of Sievers' law in Proto-Norse, as well as in the metric rules of Germanic alliterative poetry. Hence, final high vowels are dropped. However, in a two-syllable noun consisting of a long first syllable, the length of the second syllable determines whether the high vowel is dropped. Examples (all are neuter nouns):[18]

  • Short-short: werod "troop", pl. werod (treated as equivalent to a single long syllable, or more correctly as a single long foot)
  • Short-long: færeld "journey", pl. færeld
  • Long-short: hēafod "head", pl. hēafdu (from *hēafodu)
  • Long-long: īsern "iron", pl. īsern

Note also the following apparent exceptions:

  • OE wītu "punishments" (pl. of wīte) < PG *wītijō;
  • OE rīċ(i)u "kingdoms" (pl. of rīċe) < PG *rīkijō;
  • OE wildu "wild" (fem. of wilde) < PG *wildijō;
  • OE strengþu "strength" < PG *strangiþō.

In reality, these aren't exceptions because at the time of high-vowel loss the words had the same two-syllable long-short root structure as hēafod (see above).

As a result, high-vowel loss must have occurred after i-mutation but before the loss of internal -(i)j-, which occurred shortly after i-mutation.

Word-medial

Paradigm split also occurred medially as a result of high-vowel loss, e.g. in the past tense forms of Class I weak forms:

  • PG *dōmidē > OE dēmde "(he) judged"
  • PG *framidē > OE fremede "(he) did, performed (a duty)"

Normally, syncopation (i.e. vowel loss) does not occur in closed syllables, e.g. Englisċe "English", ǣresta "earliest", sċēawunge "a showing, inspection" (each word with an inflected ending following it). However, syncopation passes its usual limits in certain West Saxon verbal and adjectival forms, e.g. the present tense of strong verbs (birst "(you) carry" < PG *beris-tu, birþ "(he) carries" < PG *beriþ, similarly dēmst, dēmþ "(you) judge, (he) judges") and comparative adjectives (ġinġsta "youngest" < PG *jungistô, similarly strenġsta "strongest", lǣsta "least" < *lǣsesta < PG *laisistô).

When both medial and final high-vowel loss can operate in a single word, medial but not final loss occurs:[19]

  • PG *strangiþō > WG *strangiþu > *strengþu "strength";
  • PG *haubudō > WG *haubudu > *hēafdu "heads".

This implies that final high-vowel loss must precede medial high-vowel loss; else the result would be **strengþ, hēafd.

Loss of -(i)j- Edit

Internal -j- and its Sievers' law variant -ij-, when they still remained in an internal syllable, were lost just after high-vowel loss, but only after a long syllable. Hence:

  • PG *wītijō > WG *wītiju > OE wītu "punishments" (if -ij- were lost before high-vowel loss, the result would be **wīt);
  • PG *dōmijaną > *dø̄mijan (after i-mutation) > OE dēman "to judge" (cf. NE deem);
  • PG *satjaną > WG *sattjaną > *sættjaną (after Anglo-Frisian brightening) > *settjan (after i-mutation) > OE settan "to set".

Note that in Proto-Germanic, the non-Sievers'-law variant -j- occurred only after short syllables, but due to West Germanic gemination, a consonant directly preceding the -j- was doubled, creating a long syllable. West Germanic gemination didn't apply to /r/, leaving a short syllable, and hence /j/ wasn't lost in such circumstances:

  • PG *arjaną > OE erian "to plow".

By Sievers' law, the variant /ij/ occurred only after long syllables, and thus was always lost when it was still word-internal at this point.

When -j- and -ij- became word-final after loss of a following vowel or vowel+/z/, they were converted into -i and , respectively. The former was affected by high-vowel loss, surfacing as -e when not deleted (i.e. after /r/), while the latter always surfaces as -e:

  • PG *kunją > WG *kunnją > *kunni > *kynni > OE cynn "kin, family, kind";
  • PG *harjaz > WG *harja (West Germanic gemination didn't apply to /r/) > *hari > *heri > OE here "army";
  • PG *wītiją > *wītī > OE wīte "punishment".

It is possible that loss of medial -j- occurred slightly earlier than loss of -ij-, and in particular before high-vowel loss. This appears to be necessary to explain short -jō stem words like nytt "use":

  • PG *nutjō > WG *nuttju > *nyttju (by i-mutation) > *nyttu (by j-loss) > OE nytt (by high-vowel deletion).

If high-vowel deletion occurred first, the result would presumably be an unattested **nytte.

A similar loss of -(i)j- occurred in the other West Germanic languages, although after the earliest records of those languages (especially Old Saxon, which still has written settian, hēliand corresponding to Old English settan "to set", hǣlend "savior"). Some details are different, as the form kunni with retained -i is found in Old Saxon, Old Dutch and Old High German (but note Old Frisian kenn, kin).

This did not affect the new /j/ (< /ʝ/) formed from palatalisation of PG */ɣ/, suggesting that it was still a palatal fricative at the time of the change. For example, PG *wrōgijaną > early OE */ˈwrøːʝijan/ > OE wrēġan (/ˈwreːjan/).

Back mutation Edit

Back mutation (sometimes back umlaut, guttural umlaut, u-umlaut, or velar umlaut) is a change that took place in late prehistoric Old English and caused short e, i and sometimes a to break into a diphthong (eo, io, ea respectively, similar to breaking) when a back vowel (u, o, ō, a) occurred in the following syllable.[20] Examples:

  • seofon "seven" < *sebun (cf. Gothic sibun)
  • heol(o)stor "hiding place, cover" (cf. English holster) < earlier helustr < *hulestr < *hulistran (cf. Gothic hulistr)
  • eofor "boar" < *eburaz (cf. Old High German ebur)
  • heorot "hart" < *herutaz (cf. Old High German hiruz)
  • mioluc, meoluc "milk" < *melukz (cf. Gothic miluks)
  • liofast, leofast "you (sg.) live" < *libast
  • ealu "ale" < *aluþ

Note that io turned into eo in Early West Saxon and late Anglian.

A number of restrictions governed whether back mutation took place:

  • Generally it only took place when a single consonant followed the vowel being broken.
  • In the standard West Saxon dialect, back mutation only took place before labials (f, b, w) and liquids (l, r). In the Anglian dialect, it took place before all consonants except c, g (Anglian meodu "mead", eosol "donkey" vs. West Saxon medu, esol). In the Kentish dialect, it took place before all consonants (Kentish breogo "price" vs. West Saxon, Anglian bregu, brego).
  • Back mutation of a normally took place only in the Mercian subdialect of the Anglian dialect. Standard ealu "ale" is a borrowing from Mercian. Similar borrowings are poetic beadu "battle" and eafora "son, heir", cf. Gothic afar (many poetic words were borrowed from Mercian). On the other hand, standard bealu "evil" (arch. bale) and bearu "grove" owe their ea due to breaking — their forms at the time of breaking were *balwą, *barwaz, and the genitive singulars in Old English are bealwes, bearwes.

Anglian smoothing Edit

In the Anglian (i.e. Mercian and Northumbrian) dialects of Old English, a process called smoothing undid many of the effects of breaking. In particular, before a velar /h, ɡ, k/ or before an /r/ or /l/ followed by a velar, diphthongs were reduced to monophthongs.[21] Note that the context for smoothing is similar to the context for the earlier process of breaking that produced many of the diphthongs in the first place. In particular:

  • ea > æ before a velar, e before /r/ or /l/ + velar
  • ēa > ē
  • eo > e
  • ēo > ē
  • io > i
  • īo > ī

This change preceded h-loss and vowel assimilation.

The diphthongs ie and īe did not exist in Anglian (or in fact in any dialect other than West Saxon).

H-loss Edit

In the same contexts where the voiceless fricatives /f, θ, s/ become voiced, i.e. between vowels and between a voiced consonant and a vowel, /h/ is lost,[22] with compensatory lengthening of the preceding vowel if it is short.[23] This occurs after breaking; hence breaking before /rh/ and /lh/ takes place regardless of whether the /h/ is lost by this rule. An unstressed short vowel is absorbed into the preceding long vowel.

Examples:

  • sċōs "shoe" (gen.) < /ˈʃoː.es/ < /ˈʃoːhes/, cf. sċōh (nom.)
  • fēos "money" (gen.) < /ˈfeːo.es/ < /ˈfeohes/ < /ˈfehes/, cf. feoh (nom.)
  • wēalas "foreigners, Welsh people" < /ˈwæalhas/ < /ˈwælhas/, cf. wealh (sing.)

Vowel assimilation Edit

Two vowels that occurred in hiatus (i.e. next to each other, with no consonant separating) collapsed into a single long vowel.[24] Many occurrences were due to h-loss, but some came from other sources, e.g. loss of /j/ or /w/ after a front vowel. (Loss of /j/ occurred early, in Proto-Germanic times. Loss of /w/ occurred later, after i-umlaut.) If the first vowel was e or i (long or short), and the second vowel was a back vowel, a diphthong resulted. Examples:

  • sċōs "shoe" (gen.) < Proto-Germanic *skōhas (see under h-loss)
  • fēos "money" (gen.) < Proto-Germanic *fehas (see under h-loss)
  • frēond "friend" < frīond < Proto-Germanic *frijōndz (two syllables, cf. Gothic frijōnds)
  • sǣm "sea" (dat. pl.) < sǣum < *sǣwum < *sǣwimiz < Proto-Germanic *saiwimiz

Palatal umlaut Edit

Palatal umlaut is a process whereby short e, eo, io appear as i (occasionally ie) before final ht, hs, hþ. Examples:

  • riht "right" (cf. German recht)
  • cniht "boy" (mod. knight) (cf. German Knecht)
  • siex "six" (cf. German sechs)
  • briht, bryht "bright" (cf. non-metathesized Old English forms beorht, (Anglian) berht, Dutch brecht)
  • hlihþ "(he) laughs" < *hlehþ < *hlæhiþ + i-mutation < Proto-Germanic *hlahiþ (cf. hliehhan "to laugh" < Proto-Germanic *hlahjaną)

Unstressed vowel reduction Edit

There was steady vowel reduction in unstressed syllables, in a number of stages:

  1. In West Germanic times, absolutely final non-nasal * (but not e.g. *-ōz, * or *) was raised and shortened to -u.
  2. All other final-syllable *ō were lowered to *ā. By Anglo-Frisian brightening, these ended up as * (later ). Overlong *ô, as well as *ō in medial syllables, were unaffected.
  3. Although vowel nasality persisted at least up through Anglo-Frisian times and likely through the time of a-restoration, it was eventually lost (in stressed as well as unstressed syllables), with non-nasal vowels the result.
  4. Medial syncopation deleted word-medial short unstressed low/mid vowels in open syllables.
  5. High-vowel loss deleted short unstressed high vowels /i/ and /u/ in open syllables following a long syllable, whether word-final or word-medial.
  6. All unstressed long and overlong vowels were shortened, with remaining long ō, ô shortening to a.
  7. This produced five final-syllable short vowels, which remained into early documented Old English (back a, u; front æ, e, i). By the time of the majority of Old English documents, however, all three front short vowels had merged into e.
  8. Absolutely final -u tends to be written u (sometimes o); but before a consonant, it is normally written o (e.g. seovon "seven" < PG *sibun). Exceptions are the endings -ung, -(s)um, -uc and when the root has u in it, e.g. duguþ "band of warriors; prosperity".[25]
  9. Final-syllable e is written i in the endings -ing, -iġ, -(l)iċ, -isċ, -iht.

A table showing these developments in more detail is found in Proto-Germanic: Later developments.

Vowel lengthening Edit

In the late 8th or early 9th century, short stressed vowels were lengthened before certain groups of consonants: ld, mb, nd, ng, rd, rl, rn, rs+vowel.[26] Some of the lengthened vowels would be shortened again by or during the Middle English period; this applied particularly before the clusters beginning r. Examples of words in which the effect of lengthening has been preserved are:

  • ċild > ċīld > mod. child /aɪ/ (but lengthening did not occur if another consonant immediately followed, as in ċildru, giving modern children with /ɪ/)
  • ald > āld > mod. old /oʊ/ (but lengthening did not occur in the antepenultimate syllable, as in aldormann, giving modern alderman, with an originally short a)
  • climban > clīmban > mod. climb /aɪ/
  • grund > grūnd > mod. ground /aʊ/
  • lang > lāng > mod. long (ā went regularly to ō but was shortened in this position in late Middle English; compare Scots lang where the shortening occurred first)

Diphthong changes Edit

In Early West Saxon io and īo were merged into eo and ēo. Also, the Early West Saxon diphthongs ie and īe developed into what is known as "unstable i", merging into /y(ː)/ in Late West Saxon. For further detail, see Old English diphthongs. All of the remaining Old English diphthongs were monophthongised in the early Middle English period: see Middle English stressed vowel changes.

Dialects Edit

Old English dialects and their sound changes[27]
West Saxon Northumbrian Mercian Kentish
Proto-Germanic
ǣ > ē
no yes
palatal
diphthongization
yes limited no no
retraction
æ > a / rC
no yes
smoothing yes
a > o / N
back mutation limited yes
æ > e no no yes
Anglo-Frisian ǣ > ē no
y, ȳ > e, ē

Old English had four major dialect groups: West Saxon, Mercian, Northumbrian, and Kentish. West Saxon and Kentish occurred in the south, approximately to the south of the River Thames. Mercian constituted the middle section of the country, divided from the southern dialects by the Thames and from Northumbrian by the Humber and Mersey rivers. Northumbrian encompassed the area between the Humber and the Firth of Forth (including what is now southeastern Scotland but was once part of the Kingdom of Northumbria). In the south, the easternmost portion was Kentish and everywhere else was West Saxon. Mercian and Northumbrian are often grouped together as "Anglian".

The biggest differences occurred between West Saxon and the other groups. The differences occurred mostly in the front vowels, and particularly the diphthongs. (However, Northumbrian was distinguished from the rest by much less palatalisation. Forms in Modern English with hard /k/ and /ɡ/ where a palatalised sound would be expected from Old English are due either to Northumbrian influence or to direct borrowing from Scandinavian. Note that, in fact, the lack of palatalisation in Northumbrian was probably due to heavy Scandinavian influence.)

The early history of Kentish was similar to Anglian, but sometime around the ninth century all of the front vowels æ, e, y (long and short) merged into e (long and short). The further discussion concerns the differences between Anglian and West Saxon, with the understanding that Kentish, other than where noted, can be derived from Anglian by front-vowel merger. The primary differences were:

  • Original (post Anglo-Frisian brightening) ǣ was raised to ē in Anglian but remained in West Saxon. This occurred before other changes such as breaking, and did not affect ǣ caused by i-umlaut of ā. Hence, e.g., dǣlan "to divide" < *dailijan appears the same in both dialects, but West Saxon slǣpan "to sleep" appears as slēpan in Anglian. (Note the corresponding vowel difference in the spelling of "deal" < dǣlan vs. "sleep" < Anglian slēpan.)
  • The West Saxon vowels ie/īe, caused by i-umlaut of long and short ea, eo, io, did not appear in Anglian. Instead, i-umlaut of ea and rare eo is spelled e, and i-umlaut of io remains as io.
  • Breaking of short /æ/ to ea did not happen in Anglian before /l/ and a consonant; instead, the vowel was retracted to /a/. When mutated by i-umlaut, it appears again as æ (vs. West Saxon ie). Hence, Anglian cald "cold" vs. West Saxon ċeald.
  • Merger of eo and io (long and short) occurred early in West Saxon, but much later in Anglian.
  • Many instances of diphthongs in Anglian, including the majority of cases caused by breaking, were turned back into monophthongs again by the process of "Anglian smoothing", which occurred before c, h, g, alone or preceded by r or l. This accounts for some of the most noticeable differences between standard (i.e. West Saxon) Old English and Modern English spelling. E.g. ēage "eye" became ēge in Anglian; nēah "near" became Anglian nēh, later raised to nīh in the transition to Middle English by raising of ē before h (hence "nigh" in Modern English); nēahst "nearest" become Anglian nēhst, shortened to nehst in late Old English by vowel-shortening before three consonants (hence "next" in Modern English).

As mentioned above, Modern English derives mostly from the Anglian dialect rather than the standard West Saxon dialect of Old English. However, since London sits on the Thames near the boundary of the Anglian, West Saxon, and Kentish dialects, some West Saxon and Kentish forms have entered Modern English. For example, "bury" has its spelling derived from West Saxon and its pronunciation from Kentish (see below).

The Northumbrian dialect, which was spoken as far north as Edinburgh, survives as the Scots language spoken in Scotland and parts of Northern Ireland. The distinguishing feature of Northumbrian, the lack of palatalisation of velars, is still evident in doublets between Scots and Modern English such as kirk / "church", brig / "bridge", kist / "chest", yeuk / "itch" (OE ġyċċan < PGmc jukjaną). (However, most of the phonetic differences between Scots and Modern English postdate the Old English period: see Phonological history of Scots for more details.)

Summary of vowel developments Edit

NOTE: Another version of this table is available at Phonological history of English#Through Middle English. This covers the same changes from a more diachronic perspective. It includes less information on the specific differences between the Anglian and West Saxon dialects of Old English, but includes much more information on the Proto-Indo-European changes leading up to the vowels below, and the Middle English vowels that resulted from them.

NOTE: This table only describes the changes in accented syllables. Vowel changes in unaccented syllables were very different and much more extensive. In general, long vowels were reduced to short vowels (and sometimes deleted entirely) and short vowels were very often deleted. All remaining vowels were reduced to only the vowels /u/, /a/ and /e/, and sometimes /o/. (/o/ also sometimes appears as a variant of unstressed /u/.)

West Germanic Condition Process Old English Examples
  i-umlaut
*a   Anglo-Frisian brightening æ e *dagaz > dæġ "day"; *fastaz > fæst "fast (firm)"; *batizǫ̂ > betera "better"; *taljaną > tellan "to tell"
+n,m   a,o e *namǫ̂ > nama "name"; *langaz > lang, long "long"; *mannz, manniz > man, mon "man", plur. men "men"
+mf,nþ,ns Ingvaeonic nasal spirant law ō ē *samftijaz, samftô > sēfte, *sōfta >! sōfte "soft"; *tanþs, tanþiz > tōþ, plur. tēþ "tooth"; *gans, gansiz > gōs "goose", plur. gēs "geese"
(West Saxon) +h,rC,lC breaking ea ie *aldaz, aldizǫ̂ > eald "old", ieldra "older" (cf. "elder"); *armaz > earm "arm"; Lat. arca > earc "arc"; *darniją > dierne "secret"; *ahtau > eahta "eight"
(Anglian) +h breaking, Anglian smoothing æ e *ahtau > æhta "eight"
(Anglian) +lC retraction a æ *aldaz, aldizǫ̂ > ald "old", ældra "older" (cf. "elder")
(Anglian) +rc,rg,rh breaking, Anglian smoothing e e Lat. arca > erc "arc"
(Anglian) +rC (C not c,g,h) breaking ea e *armaz > earm "arm"; *darniją > derne "secret"
(West Saxon) +hV,hr,hl breaking, h-loss ēa īe *slahaną > slēan "to slay"; *stahliją > stīele "steel"
(Anglian) +hV,hr,hl breaking, Anglian smoothing, h-loss ēa ē *slahaną, -iþi > slēan "to slay, 3rd sing. pres. indic. slēþ "slays"; *stahliją > stēle "steel"
(West Saxon) k,g,j+ palatal diphthongization ea ie Lat. castra > ċeaster "town, fortress" (cf. names in "-caster, -chester"); *gastiz > ġiest "guest"
before a,o,u[A] a-restoration a (by analogy) æ plur. *dagôs > dagas "days"; *talō > talu "tale"; *bakaną, -iþi > bacan "to bake", 3rd sing. pres. indic. bæcþ "bakes"
(mostly non-West-Saxon) before later a,o,u back mutation ea eo[B] *alu > ealu "ale"; *awī > eowu "ewe", *asiluz > non-West-Saxon eosol "donkey"
before hs,ht,hþ + final -iz palatal umlaut N/A i (occ. ie) *nahtiz > nieht > niht "night"
*e[C]     e N/A[C] *etaną > etan "to eat"
+m   i N/A *nemaną > niman "to take"
(West Saxon) +h,rC,lc,lh,wV breaking eo N/A *fehtaną > feohtan "to fight"; *berkaną > beorcan "to bark"; *werþaną > weorðan "to become"
(Anglian) +h,rc,rg,rh breaking, Anglian smoothing e N/A *fehtaną > fehtan "to fight"; *berkaną > bercan "to bark"
(Anglian) +rC (C not c,g,h); lc,lh,wV breaking eo N/A *werþaną > weorðan "to become"
+hV,hr,hl breaking, (Anglian smoothing,) h-loss ēo N/A *sehwaną > sēon "to see"
+ late final hs,ht,hþ palatal umlaut i (occ. ie) N/A *sehs > siex "six"; *rehtaz > riht "right"
(West Saxon) k,g,j+ palatal diphthongization ie N/A *skeraną > sċieran "shear"
*i     i i *fiską > fisċ "fish"; *itiþi > 3rd sing. pres. indic. iteþ "eats"; *nimiþi > 3rd sing. pres. indic. nimeþ "takes"; *skiriþi > 3rd sing. pres. indic. sċirþ "shears"
+ mf,nþ,ns Ingvaeonic nasal spirant law ī ī *fimf > fīf "five"
(West Saxon) +h,rC breaking io > eo ie *Pihtôs > Piohtas, Peohtas "Picts"; *lirnōjaną > liornian, leornian "to learn"; *hirdijaz[B] > hierde "shepherd"; *wirþiþi > 3rd sing. pres. indic. wierþ "becomes"
(Anglian) +h,rc,rg,rh breaking, Anglian smoothing i i *stihtōjaną > stihtian "to establish"
(Anglian) +rC (C not c,g,h) breaking io > eo i *a + firrijaną > afirran "to remove" (cf. feorr "far")
(West Saxon) +hV,hr,hl breaking, h-loss īo > ēo īe *twihōjaną > twīoġan, twēon "to doubt"
(Anglian) +hV,hr,hl breaking, Anglian smoothing, h-loss īo > ēo ī *twihōjaną > twīoġan, twēon "to doubt"; *sihwiþi > 3rd sing. pres. indic. sīþ "sees"
before w breaking io > eo i *niwulaz > *niowul, neowul "prostrate"; *spiwiz > *spiwe "vomiting"
before a,o,u back mutation i (io, eo) N/A *miluks > mioluc,meolc "milk"
*u     u y *sunuz > sunu "son"; *kumaną, -iþi > cuman "to come", 3rd sing. pres. indic. cymþ "comes"; *guldijaną > gyldan "to gild"
+ mf,nþ,ns Ingvaeonic nasal spirant law ū ȳ *munþs > mūþ "mouth"; *wunskijaną > wȳsċan "wish"
before non-nasal + a,e,o[D] a-mutation o (by analogy) e *hurną > horn "horn"; *brukanaz > brocen "broken"; *duhter, duhtriz > dohter "daughter", plur. dehter "daughters"
+hV,hr,hl h-loss ū ȳ *uhumistaz > ȳmest "highest"
(*ē >) *ā   Anglo-Frisian brightening (West Saxon) ǣ ǣ *slāpaną > slǣpan "to sleep", Lat. strāta > strǣt "street"; *dādiz > dǣd "deed"
(Anglian) ē ē *slāpaną > slēpan "to sleep", Lat. strāta > strēt "street"; *dādiz > dēd "deed"; Lat. cāseus > ċēse "cheese"; *nāhaz, nāhistaz > nēh "near" (cf. "nigh"), superl. nēhst "nearest" (cf. "next")
(West Saxon) k,g,j+ palatal diphthongization ēa īe *jārō > ġēar "year"; Lat. cāseus > ċīese "cheese"
+n,m   ō ē *mānǫ̂ > mōna "moon"; *kwāniz > kwēn "queen"
(West Saxon) +h breaking ēa īe *nāhaz, nāhistaz > nēah "near" (cf. "nigh"), superl. nīehst "nearest" (cf. "next")
+w;ga,go,gu;la,lo,lu a-restoration ā ǣ *knāwaną, -iþi > cnāwan "to know", 3rd sing. pres. indic. cnǣwþ "knows"
*ē₂     ē ē *mē₂dą > mēd "reward"
    ō ē *fōts, fōtiz > fōt "foot", plur. fēt "feet"
    ī ī *wībą > wīf "wife"; *līhiþi > Anglian 3rd sing. pres. indic. līþ "lends"
(West Saxon) +h breaking īo > ēo īe *līhaną, -iþi > lēon "to lend", 3rd sing. pres. indic. līehþ "lends"
    ū ȳ *mūs, mūsiz > mūs "mouse", plur. mȳs "mice"
*ai     ā ǣ *stainaz > stān "stone", *kaisaraz > cāsere "emperor", *hwaitiją > hwǣte "wheat"
*au     ēa (West Saxon) īe *auzǭ > ēare "ear"; *hauzijaną > hīeran "to hear"; *hauh, hauhist > hēah "high", superl. hīehst "highest"
(Anglian) ē *auzǭ > ēare "ear"; *hauzijaną > hēran "to hear"
(Anglian) +c,g,h;rc,rg,rh;lc,lg,lh Anglian smoothing ē ē *hauh, hauhist > hēh "high", superl. hēhst "highest"
*eu[E]     ēo N/A[E] *deupaz > dēop "deep"; *fleugǭ > flēoge "fly"; *beudaną > bēodan "to command"
(Anglian) +c,g,h;rc,rg,rh;lc,lg,lh Anglian smoothing ē N/A *fleugǭ > flēge "fly"
*iu[E]     N/A (West Saxon) īe *biudiþi > 3rd sing. pres. indic. bīett "commands"; *liuhtijaną > līehtan "to lighten"
(Anglian) īo *biudiþi > 3rd sing. pres. indic. bīott "commands"
(Anglian) +c,g,h;rc,rg,rh;lc,lg,lh Anglian smoothing N/A ī *liuhtijaną > līhtan "to lighten"
  1. ^ The process of a-restoration, as described here, reversed the previous process of Anglo-Frisian brightening, leaving an /a/. However, it was blocked when an /i/ or /j/ followed in the next syllable; instead, /a/ was converted to /æ/ by Anglo-Frisian brightening, and then umlauted to /e/. This accounts for the outcomes of PGmc *talō > talu "tale" vs. the related PGmc *taljaną > tellan "to tell". However, in some instances when a-restoration was blocked, the /æ/ that remained from Anglo-Frisian brightening was still reverted to /a/ by analogy with related words where a-restoration did apply; this /a/ was then umlauted to /æ/. This happened especially in verbs when some forms (e.g. the third-person singular present indicative) had umlaut, and other forms (e.g. the infinitive) did not; for example, PGmc *bakaną > OE bacan "to bake" vs. PG *bakiþi > OE bæcþ "(he) bakes". This accounts for the "(by analogy)" notation in the i-umlaut column. The following diagrams show the processes involved in more detail:
    No analogy
    Step "tale" "to tell" Reason
    1 *talō *taljaną original forms
    2 *talu *talljan after various changes, irrelevant here (e.g. West Germanic gemination)
    3 *tælu *tælljan Anglo-Frisian brightening
    4 *talu *tælljan a-restoration
    5 *talu *tælljan unaffected by analogy
    6 *talu *telljan i-mutation
    7 talu tellan after further changes, irrelevant here
    Analogy
    Step "to bake" "(he) bakes" Reason
    1 *bakaną *bakiþi original forms
    2 *bakan *bakiþ after various changes, irrelevant here
    3 *bækan *bækiþ Anglo-Frisian brightening
    4 *bakan *bækiþ a-restoration
    5 *bakan *bakiþ by analogy with the infinitive
    6 *bakan *bækiþ i-mutation
    7 bacan bæcþ after further changes, irrelevant here

    Analogy took place between related forms of a single lexical item, e.g. different forms of the same verb or noun. It generally did not take place between related lexical items derived from the same root, e.g. between talu "tale" and tellan "to tell".

  2. ^ a b This entry is misleading. Back mutation actually took place after i-mutation; this is why the result of applying both i-mutation and back mutation to a is eo rather than ie, the normal i-mutation of ea. Note also that back mutation applies only when the following syllable contains a, o, u, while i-mutation applies only when the following syllable contains i, j; hence you would not expect both back mutation and i-mutation to apply in a single word. All instances in which this occurs had one suffix substituted for another between the operation of the two processes. For example:
    • Latin asellum "donkey" > Proto-Germanic *asilu (replacement of Latin diminutive suffix -ell- with similar Proto-Germanic diminutive suffix -il) > *æsil (a-fronting) > *esil (i-mutation) > *esel (a normal change in unstressed syllables) > esol (substitution of more common -ol for less common -el) > eosol (back mutation)
    • Proto-Germanic *awī "ewe" > *awi (vowel reduction in unstressed syllables) > *ewi (i-mutation) > ewu (feminine -i disappeared in prehistoric Old English and was replaced with -u; a similar change occurred in e.g. menigu "multitude", cf. Gothic managei) > eowu (back mutation)
  3. ^ a b Proto-Indo-European /e/ was already mutated to /i/ in Proto-Germanic in two contexts: When occurring before /n/ plus consonant, and when occurring before /i/ or /j/. The more general i-mutation that applied to all vowels in Old English is a separate process that occurred many centuries later, although it had the same effect on /e/. (Note that due to this earlier change there were few instances of /e/ that could be affected by Old English i-mutation. For this reason, the i-mutations of /e/ are listed in parens, e.g. (i), to indicate that the given results are not due directly to i-mutation of /e/, but to i-mutation of /i/ or of some vowel derived from it, e.g. io.) This is also why the Proto-West-Germanic form of hierde "shepherd" appears already as *hirdijaz with /i/ in the root even though it's clearly related to heord "herd" (Proto-West-Germanic *herdō). It is also why there's no entry for "+mf,nþ,ns" under /e/ even though it occurs for all other vowels. Furthermore, describing i as the i-mutation of e, or ie as the i-mutation of eo, is misleading at best. In fact, as just described, e was not mutated to i by i-mutation, but rather in an i-mutation environment i already appeared due to the earlier mutation of /e/ to /i/. Similarly, eo from earlier /e/ in a "breaking" environment was not mutated to ie by i-mutation. In this case again, /i/ already appeared in the i-mutation environment, which was broken to io due to the "breaking" environment it was in, and this io was then mutated to ie by i-mutation. Note further that the breaking environments for /i/ were more restrictive than those for /e/. Hence it's possible for post-breaking non-umlaut-context eo to correspond to umlaut-context i rather than io (e.g. before lh or lc), and therefore for a post-umlaut alternation between eo and i to exist. Presumably, these anomalous alternations were mostly eliminated by analogy.
  4. ^ A very similar process to what is described in note A resulted in the umlaut of /o/ sometimes appearing as /y/ (the "normal" outcome), and sometimes as /e/ (by analogy). Just like a-restoration, a-mutation (which lowered /u/ to /o/ before /a, e, o/) was blocked by a following /i/ or /j/, and the /u/ that was left over was sometimes changed into /o/ by analogy, and sometimes not changed.
  5. ^ a b c Proto-Germanic mutation of /e/ to /i/ before /i/ or /j/ also affected /eu/, producing /iu/. In fact, /iu/ occurs only before /i/ or /j/ in the following syllable, and /eu/ never occurs in these circumstances. That is, /iu/ is in fact an allophone of /eu/. It is typically written as /iu/, rather than [iu], because in the later Germanic dialects the reflexes of the sound do in fact become separate phonemes.

Changes leading up to Middle and Modern English Edit

For a detailed description of the changes between Old English and Middle/Modern English, see the article on the phonological history of English. A summary of the main vowel changes is presented below. Note that the spelling of Modern English largely reflects Middle English pronunciation. Note also that this table presents only the general developments. Many exceptional outcomes occurred in particular environments, e.g. vowels were often lengthened in late Old English before /ld, nd, mb/; vowels changed in complex ways before /r/, throughout the history of English; vowels were diphthongised in Middle English before /h/; new diphthongs arose in Middle English by the combination of vowels with Old English w, g /ɣ/ > /w/, and ġ /j/; etc. The only conditional development considered in detail below is Middle English open-syllable lengthening. Note that, in the column on modern spelling, CV means a sequence of a single consonant followed by a vowel.

NOTE: In this table, abbreviations are used as follows:

Late Old English (Anglian), c. 1000 Middle English pronunciation, c. 1400 Modern English spelling, c. 1500 Early Modern English pronunciation, c. 1600 Modern English pronunciation, c. 2000 Source Example Written as
a; æ; ea; ā+CC; often ǣ+CC,ēa+CC; occ. ē+CC (WS ǣ+CC) /a/ a /a/ /æ/ OE a OE mann > man; OE lamb > lamb; OE sang > sang; OE sacc > sack; OE assa > ass (donkey) a
OE æ OE fæþm embrace > fathom; OE sæt > sat; OE æt > at; OE mæsse > mass (at church)
OE ea OE weax > wax; OE healf > half /hæf/ (GA)
OE +CC OE āscian > ask /æsk/ (GA); OE fǣtt > fat; OE lǣstan > to last /læst/ (GA) ; OE blēddre (WS blǣddre) > bladder; OE brēmbel (WS brǣmbel) > bramble
(w+, not +g,ck,ng,nk) GA /ɑ/, RP /ɒ/ OE a OE swan > swan; OE wasċan > to wash; OE wann dark > wan
OE æ OE swæþ > swath; OE wæsp > wasp
OE ea OE wealwian > to wallow; OE swealwe > swallow (bird)
(+r) /ar/ > GA /ɑr/, RP /ɑː/ OE heard > hard; OE ærc (WS earc) > ark
(w+ and +r) /ɔr/ > GA /ɔr/, RP /ɔː/ OE ea OE swearm > swarm; OE sweart > old poetic swart >! swarthy; OE weardian > to ward; OE wearm > warm; OE wearnian > to warn
(+lC,l#) /ɔː/ OE smæl > small; OE all (WS eall) > all; OE walcian (WS wealcian) to roll > to walk
(+lm) GA /ɑ/, RP /ɑː/ OE ælmesse > alms; Latin palma > OE palm > palm
(RP, often +f,s,th) /ɑː/ OE glæs > glass; OE græs > grass; OE pæþ > path; OE æfter > after; OE āscian /ɑːsk/ > to ask; OE lǣstan /lɑːst/ > to last
(leng.) /aː/ [æː] aCV /ɛː/ /eː/ > /ei/ OE a OE nama > name; OE nacod > naked; OE bacan > to bake
OE æ OE æcer > acre; OE hwæl > whale; OE hræfn > raven
(+r) /eːr/ > GA /ɛr/, RP /ɛə/ OE a OE caru > care; OE faran > to fare; OE starian > to stare
e; eo; occ. y; ē+CC; ēo+CC; occ. ǣ+CC,ēa+CC /e/ e /ɛ/ /ɛ/ OE e OE helpan > to help; OE elh (WS eolh) > elk; OE tellan > to tell; OE betera > better; OE streċċan > to stretch
OE eo OE seofon > seven
OE y OE myriġ > merry; OE byrġan > to bury /bɛri/; OE lyft- weak > left (hand); OE cnyll > knell
OE +CC OE cēpte > kept; OE mētte > met; OE bēcnan (WS bīecnan) > to beckon; OE clǣnsian > to cleanse; OE flǣsċ > flesh; OE lǣssa > less; OE frēond > friend /frɛnd/; OE þēofþ (WS þīefþ) > theft; OE hēold > held
(+r) ar /ar/ GA /ɑr/, RP /ɑː/ OE heorte > heart; OE bercan (WS beorcan) > to bark; OE teoru (WS teru) > tar; OE steorra > star
(w+ and +r) /ɔr/ > GA /ɔr/, RP /ɔː/ AN werra > war; AN werbler > to warble
(occ. +r) er /ɛr/ /ər/ > GA /ər/, RP /ɜː/ OE e OE sterne (WS stierne, styrne) > stern
OE eo OE eorl > earl; OE eorþe > earth; OE liornian, leornian > to learn
OE +CC OE hērde (WS hīerde) > heard
(leng.) /ɛː/ ea,eCV /eː/ /iː/ OE specan > to speak; OE mete > meat; OE beofor > beaver; OE meotan (WS metan) > to mete /miːt/; OE eotan (WS etan) > to eat; OE meodu (WS medu) > mead; OE yfel > evil
(+r) /iːr/ > GA /ɪr/, RP /ɪə/ OE spere > spear; OE mere > mere (lake)

ea; e

(occ.) /ei/ OE brecan > to break /breik/ ea
(occ. +r) /eːr/ > GA /ɛr/, RP /ɛə/ OE beoran (WS beran) > to bear; OE pere, peru > pear; OE swerian > to swear; OE wer man > were- ea; e
(often +th,d,t,v) /ɛ/ OE leþer > leather /lɛðɚ/; OE stede > stead; OE weder > weather; OE heofon > heaven; OE hefiġ > heavy ea
i; y; ī+CC,ȳ+CC; occ. ēoc,ēc; occ. ī+CV,ȳ+CV /i/ i /ɪ/ /ɪ/ OE i OE writen > written; OE sittan > to sit; OE fisċ > fish; OE lifer > liver
OE y OE bryċġ > bridge; OE cyssan > to kiss; OE dyde > did; OE synn > sin; OE gyldan > to gild; OE bysiġ > busy /bɪzi/
OE +CC OE wīsdōm > wisdom; OE fīftiġ > fifty; OE wȳsċan > to wish; OE cȳþþ(u) > kith; OE fȳst > fist
OE ȳ+CV,ī+CV OE ċīcen > chicken; OE lȳtel > little
OE ēoc,ēc OE sēoc > sick; OE wēoce > wick; OE ēc + nama > ME eke-name >! nickname
(+r) /ər/ > GA /ər/, RP /ɜː/ OE gyrdan > to gird; OE fyrst > first; OE styrian > to stir
(leng. — occ.) /eː/ ee /iː/ /iː/ OE wicu > week; OE pilian > to peel; OE bitela > beetle ee
o; ō+CC /o/ o /ɔ/ GA /ɑ/, RP /ɒ/ OE o OE god > god; OE beġeondan > beyond
OE +CC OE gōdspell > gospel; OE fōddor > fodder; OE fōstrian > to foster
(GA, +f,s,th,g,ng) /ɔː/ OE moþþe > moth; OE cros > cross; OE frost > frost; OE of > off; OE oft > oft; OE sōfte > soft
(+r) /ɔr/ > GA /ɔr/, RP /ɔː/ OE corn > corn; OE storc > storc; OE storm > storm
(leng.) /ɔː/ oa,oCV /oː/ GA /ou/, RP /əu/ OE fola > foal; OE nosu > nose; OE ofer > over
(+r) /oːr/ > GA /ɔr/, RP /ɔː/ OE borian > to bore; OE fore > fore; OE bord > board oa; o
u; occ. y; ū+CC; w+ e,eo,o,y +r /u/ u,o /ʊ/ /ʌ/ OE u OE bucc > buck /bʌk/; OE lufian > to love /lʌv/; OE uppe > up; OE on bufan > above
OE y OE myċel > ME muchel >! much; OE blysċan > to blush; OE cyċġel > cudgel; OE clyċċan > to clutch; OE sċytel > shuttle
OE +CC OE dūst > dust; OE tūsc > tusk; OE rūst > rust
(b,f,p+ and +l,sh) /ʊ/ OE full > full /fʊl/; OE bula > bull; OE bysċ > bush
(+r) /ər/ > GA /ər/, RP /ɜː/ OE u OE spurnan > to spurn
OE y OE ċyriċe > church; OE byrþen > burden; OE hyrdel > hurdle
OE w+,+r OE word > word; OE werc (WS weorc) > work; OE werold > world; OE wyrm > worm; OE wersa (WS wiersa) > worse; OE weorþ > worth o
(leng. — occ.) /oː/ oo /uː/ /uː/ OE (brȳd)-guma > ME (bride)-gome >! (bride)-groom oo
(+r) /uːr/ > /oːr/ > GA /ɔr/, RP /ɔː/ OE duru > door oo
(often +th,d,t) /ʌ/ ?
(occ. +th,d,t) /ʊ/ OE wudu > wood /wʊd/ oo
ā; often a+ld,mb /ɔː/ oa,oCV /oː/ GA /ou/, RP /əu/ OE ā OE āc > oak; OE hāl > whole oa; o
OE +ld,mb OE camb > comb; OE ald (WS eald) > old; OE haldan (WS healdan) > to hold
(+r) /oːr/ > GA /ɔr/, RP /ɔː/ OE ār > oar, ore; OE māra > more; OE bār > boar; OE sār > sore
ǣ; ēa /ɛː/ ea,eCV /eː/ /iː/ OE ǣ OE hǣlan > to heal /hiːl/; OE hǣtu > heat; OE hwǣte > wheat
OE ēa OE bēatan > to beat /biːt/; OE lēaf > leaf; OE ċēap > cheap
(+r) /iːr/ > GA /ɪr/, RP /ɪə/ OE rǣran > to rear ; OE ēare > ear; OE sēar > sere; OE sēarian > to sear
(occ.) /ei/ OE grēat > great /greit/
(occ. +r) /eːr/ > GA /ɛr/, RP /ɛə/ OE ǣr > ere (before)
(often +th,d,t) /ɛ/ OE ǣ OE brǣþ odor > breath; OE swǣtan > to sweat; OE -sprǣdan > to spread
OE ēa OE dēad > dead /dɛd/; OE dēaþ death; OE þrēat menace > threat; OE rēad > red; OE dēaf > deaf
ē; ēo; often e+ld /eː/ ee,ie(nd/ld) /iː/ /iː/ OE ē OE fēdan > to feed; OE grēdiġ (WS grǣdiġ) > greedy; OE > me; OE fēt > feet; OE dēd (WS dǣd) > deed; OE nēdl (WS nǣdl) > needle
OE ēo OE dēop deep; OE fēond > fiend; OE betwēonum > between; OE bēon > to be
OE +ld OE feld > field; OE ġeldan (WS ġieldan) to pay > to yield
(often +r) /ɛːr/ ear,erV /eːr/ /iːr/ > GA /ɪr/, RP /ɪə/ OE ē OE hēr > here; OE hēran (WS hīeran) > to hear; OE fēr (WS fǣr) > fear
OE ēo OE dēore (WS dīere) > dear
(occ.) /eːr/ > GA /ɛr/, RP /ɛə/ OE þēr (WS þǣr) > there; OE hwēr (WS hwǣr) > where
(occ. +r) /eːr/ eer /iːr/ /iːr/ > GA /ɪr/, RP /ɪə/ OE bēor > beer; OE dēor > deer; OE stēran (WS stīeran) > to steer; OE bēr (WS bǣr) > bier
ī; ȳ; often i+ld,mb,nd; often y+ld,mb,nd /iː/ i,iCV /əi/ /ai/ OE ī OE rīdan > to ride; OE tīma > time; OE hwīt > white; OE mīn > mine (of me)
OE ȳ OE mȳs > mice; OE brȳd > bride; OE hȳdan > to hide
OE +ld,mb,nd OE findan > to find; OE ċild > child; OE climban > to climb; OE mynd > mind
(+r) /air/ > GA /air/, RP /aiə/ OE fȳr > fire; OE hȳrian > to hire; OE wīr > wire
ō; occ. ēo /oː/ oo /u:/ /u:/ OE ō OE mōna > moon; OE sōna > soon; OE fōd > food /fuːd/; OE dōn > to do
OE ēo OE ċēosan > to choose; OE sċēotan > to shoot
(+r) /uːr/ > /oːr/ > GA /ɔr/, RP /ɔː/ OE flōr > floor; OE mōr > moor
(occ. +th,d,v) /ʌ/ OE blōd > blood /blʌd/; OE mōdor > mother /mʌðə(r)/; OE glōf > glove /glʌv/
(often +th,d,t,k) /ʊ/ OE gōd > good /gʊd/; OE bōc > book /bʊk/; OE lōcian > to look /lʊk/; OE fōt > foot /fʊt/
ū; often u+nd /uː/ ou /əu/ /au/ OE ū OE mūs > mouse; OE ūt, ūte > out; OE hlūd > loud
OE +nd OE ġefunden > found; OE hund > hound; OE ġesund > sound (safe)
(+r) /aur/ > GA /aur/, RP /auə/ OE OE ūre > our; OE sċūr > shower; OE sūr > sour
(occ. +t) /ʌ/ OE būtan > but; OE strūtian > ME strouten > to strut


Note that the Modern English vowel usually spelled au (British /ɔː/, American /ɔ/) does not appear in the above chart. Its main source is late Middle English /au/, which come from various sources: Old English aw and ag ("claw" < clawu, "law" < lagu); diphthongisation before /h/ ("sought" < sōhte, "taught" < tāhte, "daughter" < dohtor); borrowings from Latin and French ("fawn" < Old French faune, "Paul" < Latin Paulus). Other sources are Early Modern English lengthening of /a/ before /l/ ("salt, all"); occasional shortening and later re-lengthening of Middle English /ɔː/ ("broad" < /brɔːd/ < brād); and in American English, lengthening of short o before unvoiced fricatives and voiced velars ("dog, long, off, cross, moth", all with /ɔ/ in American English, at least in dialects that still maintain the difference between /a/ and /ɔ/).

As mentioned above, Modern English is derived from the Middle English of London, which is derived largely from Anglian Old English, with some admixture of West Saxon and Kentish. One of the most noticeable differences among the dialects is the handling of original Old English /y/. By the time of the written Old English documents, the Old English of Kent had already unrounded /y/ to /e/, and the late Old English of Anglia unrounded /y/ to /i/. In the West Saxon area, /y/ remained as such well into Middle English times, and was written u in Middle English documents from this area. Some words with this sound were borrowed into London Middle English, where the unfamiliar /y/ was substituted with /u/. Hence:

  • "gild" < gyldan, "did" < dyde, "sin" < synn, "mind" < mynd, "dizzy" < dysiġ "foolish", "lift" < lyft "air", etc. show the normal (Anglian) development.
  • "much" < myċel shows the West Saxon development.
  • "merry" < myriġ shows the Kentish development.
  • "build" < byldan and "busy" < bysiġ have their spelling from West Saxon but pronunciation from Anglian.
  • "bury" /ˈbɛri/ < byrġan has its spelling from West Saxon but its pronunciation from Kentish.

Note that some apparent instances of modern e for Old English y are actually regular developments, particularly where the y is a development of earlier (West Saxon) ie from i-mutation of ea, as the normal i-mutation of ea in Anglian is e; for example, "stern" < styrne < *starnijaz, "steel" < stȳle < *stahliją (cf. Old Saxon stehli). Also, some apparent instances of modern u for Old English y may actually be due to the influence of a related form with unmutated u, e.g. "sundry" < syndriġ, influenced by sundor "apart, differently" (cf. "to sunder" and "asunder").

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Campbell 1959, pp. 50–51.
  2. ^ Campbell 1959, p. 108.
  3. ^ Campbell 1959, p. 53, sec. 34.
  4. ^ Campbell 1959, pp. 52–53, sec. 131–133.
  5. ^ Minkova 2014, §6.5.3 Diphthongs and Diphthongoids.
  6. ^ Campbell 1959, pp. 54–60.
  7. ^ Campbell 1959, pp. 60–62.
  8. ^ Cercignani 1983.
  9. ^ van Gelderen, E., A History of the English Language, John Benjamins 2014, p. 100.
  10. ^ Campbell 1959, pp. 62–64, sec. 164–168.
  11. ^ Campbell 1959, pp. 64–71, sec. 170–189.
  12. ^ Campbell 1959.
  13. ^ Mitchell & Robinson 2001.
  14. ^ Lass 1994.
  15. ^ a b Hogg 2011:23: Brunner takes the i of ie after palatalal consonant as purely diacritical ... Colman (1985) argues that ie which is the product of i-umlaut represents /iy̆, iy/. Colman holds the same position as Brunner ... with regard to ie after a palatal consonant.
  16. ^ Campbell 1959, pp. 143–144, sec. 341–342.
  17. ^ Campbell 1959, pp. 144–4751.
  18. ^ Mitchell & Robinson 1992, p. 25.
  19. ^ Campbell 1959, pp. 146–147, sec. 353.
  20. ^ Campbell 1959, pp. 85–93, sec. 205–221.
  21. ^ Campbell 1959, pp. 93–98, sec. 222–233.
  22. ^ Campbell 1959, pp. 186–187, sec. 461–466.
  23. ^ Campbell 1959, pp. 104–105, sec. 241–242.
  24. ^ Campbell 1959, pp. 98–104, sec. 170–189.
  25. ^ Campbell 1959, pp. 155–156, sec. 373.
  26. ^ Prins 1972, p. 69.
  27. ^ Toon 1992, p. 416

References Edit

  • Baker, Peter S. (2007). Introduction to Old English (2nd ed.). Oxford: Blackwell. ISBN 978-1-4051-5272-3.
  • Campbell, A. (1959). Old English Grammar. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-811943-7.
  • Cercignani, Fausto (1983). "The Development of */k/ and */sk/ in Old English". Journal of English and Germanic Philology. 82 (3): 313–323.
  • Hogg, Richard M. (1992). "Chapter 3: Phonology and Morphology". In Hogg, Richard M. (ed.). The Cambridge History of the English Language. Vol. 1: The Beginnings to 1066. Cambridge University Press. pp. 67–168. doi:10.1017/CHOL9780521264747. ISBN 978-0-521-26474-7.
  • Lass, Roger (1994). Old English: A historical linguistic companion. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-43087-9.
  • Minkova, Donka (2014). A Historical Phonology of English. Edinburgh University Press Ltd. ISBN 978-0-7486-3469-9.
  • Mitchell, Bruce; Robinson, Fred C. (2001). A Guide to Old English (6th ed.). Oxford: Blackwell. ISBN 0-631-22636-2.
  • Prins, A.A. (1972). A History of English Phonemes. Leiden: Leiden University Press.
  • Toon, Thomas E. (1992). "Chapter 6: Old English Dialects". In Hogg, Richard M. (ed.). The Cambridge History of the English Language. Vol. 1: The Beginnings to 1066. Cambridge University Press. pp. 67–168. doi:10.1017/CHOL9780521264747. ISBN 978-0-521-26474-7.

phonological, history, english, overview, english, pronunciation, english, phonology, this, article, section, should, specify, language, english, content, using, lang, transliteration, transliterated, languages, phonetic, transcriptions, with, appropriate, cod. For an overview of Old English pronunciation see Old English phonology This article or section should specify the language of its non English content using lang transliteration for transliterated languages and IPA for phonetic transcriptions with an appropriate ISO 639 code Wikipedia s multilingual support templates may also be used See why April 2019 This article contains phonetic transcriptions in the International Phonetic Alphabet IPA For an introductory guide on IPA symbols see Help IPA For the distinction between and see IPA Brackets and transcription delimiters The phonological system of the Old English language underwent many changes during the period of its existence These included a number of vowel shifts and the palatalisation of velar consonants in many positions For historical developments prior to the Old English period see Proto Germanic language Contents 1 Phonetic transcription 2 Phonological processes 2 1 Absorption of nasals before fricatives 2 2 First a fronting 2 3 Monophthongization 2 4 Second a fronting 2 5 Diphthong height harmonisation 2 6 Breaking and retraction 2 7 A restoration 2 8 Palatalization 2 9 Second fronting 2 10 Palatal diphthongization 2 11 Metathesis of r 2 12 I mutation i umlaut 2 13 Medial syncopation 2 14 High vowel loss 2 15 Loss of i j 2 16 Back mutation 2 17 Anglian smoothing 2 18 H loss 2 19 Vowel assimilation 2 20 Palatal umlaut 2 21 Unstressed vowel reduction 2 22 Vowel lengthening 3 Diphthong changes 4 Dialects 5 Summary of vowel developments 6 Changes leading up to Middle and Modern English 7 Notes 8 ReferencesPhonetic transcription EditVarious conventions are used below for describing Old English words reconstructed parent forms of various sorts and reconstructed Proto West Germanic PWG Proto Germanic PG and Proto Indo European PIE forms Forms in italics denote either Old English words as they appear in spelling or reconstructed forms of various sorts Where phonemic ambiguity occurs in Old English spelling extra diacritics are used ċ ġ a ǣ e i ō u ȳ Forms between slashes or brackets indicate respectively broad phonemic or narrow allophonic pronunciation Sounds are indicated using standard IPA notation The following table indicates the correspondence between spelling and pronunciation transcribed in the International Phonetic Alphabet For details of the relevant sound systems see Proto Germanic phonology and Old English phonology Sound Spelling PronunciationShort vowels o e etc o e etc Short nasal vowels ǫ e etc o ẽ etc Long vowels ō e etc oː eː etc Long nasal vowels ǭ e etc oː ẽː etc Overlong vowels o e oːː eːː Overlong nasal vowels ǫ e oːː ẽːː Long diphthongs ea eo io ie aeːɑ eːo iːu iːy Short diphthongs ea eo io ie aeɑ eo iu iy Old English unpalatalized velars1 c sc g ng gg k sk ɣ ŋɡ ɡ Old English palatalized velars1 ċ sċ ġ nġ ċġ tʃ ʃ j ndʒ ddʒ Proto Germanic velars1 k sk g sometimes also ɣ k sk ɡ ɣ Proto Germanic voiced stops fricatives1 b d g sometimes also b d or đ ɣ b b d d ɡ ɣ 1Proto Germanic b d ɡ had two allophones each stops b d ɡ and fricatives b d ɣ The stops occurred following a nasal when geminated word initially for b and d only following l for d only By West Germanic times d was pronounced as a stop d in all positions The fricative allophones are sometimes indicated in reconstructed forms to make it easier to understand the development of Old English consonants Old English retained the allophony ɡ ɣ which in case of palatalisation see below became dʒ j Later non palatalized ɣ became ɡ word initially The allophony b b was broken when b merged with v the voiced allophone of f Phonological processes EditSee also Phonological history of the English language A number of phonological processes affected Old English in the period before the earliest documentation The processes affected especially vowels and are the reason that many Old English words look significantly different from related words in languages such as Old High German which is much closer to the common West Germanic ancestor of both languages The processes took place chronologically in roughly the order described below with uncertainty in ordering as noted Absorption of nasals before fricatives Edit This is the source of such alternations as modern English five mouth us versus German funf Mund uns For detail see Ingvaeonic nasal spirant law First a fronting Edit The Anglo Frisian languages underwent a sound change in their development from Proto West Germanic by which a ɑː unless followed by n m or nasalized was fronted to ǣ aeː 1 This was similar to the later process affecting short a which is known as Anglo Frisian brightening or First Fronting see below Nasalized a and the sequences an am were unaffected and were later raised to ǭ ōn ōm see below This may be taken to imply that a nasal consonant n m caused a preceding long vowel to nasalise In the non West Saxon dialects of English including the Anglian dialect underlying Modern English the fronted vowel was further raised to e eː W S slǣpan sċeap lt Proto West Germanic slapan skapă lt Proto Germanic slepana skepa versus Anglian slepan sċep The Modern English descendants sleep and sheep reflect the Anglian vowel the West Saxon words would have developed to sleap sheap The vowel affected by this change which is reconstructed as being a low back vowel a ɑː in Proto West Germanic was the reflex of Proto Germanic ɛː It is possible that in Anglo Frisian Proto Germanic ɛː simply remained a front vowel developing to Old English ǣ or e without ever passing through an intermediate stage as the back vowel ɑː 2 However borrowings such as Old English strǣt from Latin strata via and the backing to ō before nasals are much easier to explain under the assumption of a common West Germanic stage a Monophthongization Edit Proto Germanic ai was monophthongized smoothed to aː ɑː 3 This occurred after first a fronting For example Proto Germanic stainaz became Old English stan modern stone cf Old Frisian sten vs Gothic stain Old High German stein In many cases the resulting ɑː was later fronted to aeː by i mutation dǣlan to divide cf Old Frisian dela vs Gothic dailjan Old High German teilen Modern English deal It is possible that this monophthongization occurred via the height harmonisation that produced the other diphthongs in Old English presumably through an intermediate stage ai gt ɑae gt aː Second a fronting Edit The second part of a fronting called Anglo Frisian brightening or First Fronting is very similar to the first part except that it affects short a instead of long a Here a ɑ is fronted to ae ae unless followed by n m or nasalized the same conditions as applied in the first part 4 Importantly a fronting was blocked by n m only in stressed syllables not unstressed syllables which accounts for forms like ġefen formerly ġefaen given from Proto Germanic gebanaz However the infinitive ġefan retains its back vowel due to a restoration see the explanation given in that section for the similar case of faren vs faran Diphthong height harmonisation Edit Proto Germanic had the closing diphthongs ai au eu and iu an allophone of eu when an i or j followed in the next syllable In Old English these except ai which had been monophthongised as noted above developed into diphthongs of a generally less common type in which both elements are of the same height called height harmonic diphthongs This process is called diphthong height harmonisation Specifically au ɑu underwent a fronting to aeu and was then harmonised to aeːɑ spelled ea or in modern texts ea eu eu was harmonised to eːo spelled eo or in modern texts eo iu was already harmonic it became a separate phoneme iːu who spelled io or in modern texts io This interpretation is somewhat controversial see below Old English diphthongs also arose from other later processes such as breaking palatal diphthongisation back mutation and i mutation which also gave an additional diphthong ie iy The diphthongs could occur both short monotonic aea eo iu iy who and long aeːa eːo iːu iːy Some sources reconstruct other phonetic forms that are not height harmonic for some or all of these Old English diphthongs The first elements of ea eo io are generally accepted to have had the qualities ae e i evidence for these qualities comes from the behaviour of breaking and back mutation as described below the Middle English development of short ea into a could also provide some evidence for the phonetic realisation of ea However the interpretations of the second elements of these diphthongs are more varied There are analyses that treat all of these diphthongs as ending in a schwa sound e i e ea eo io aee ee ie 5 For io and ie the height harmonic interpretations iu and iy who are controversial with many especially more traditional sources assuming that the pronunciation matched the spelling io ie and hence that these diphthongs were of the opening rather than the height harmonic type In Early West Saxon and later in Anglian io both long and short merged with eo Breaking and retraction Edit Vowel breaking in Old English is the diphthongization of the short front vowels i e ae to short diphthongs iu eo aeɑ when followed by x w or by r or l plus another consonant 6 Long iː aeː similarly broke to iːu aeːa but only when followed by x The geminates rr and ll usually count as r or l plus another consonant but breaking does not occur before ll produced by West Germanic gemination the i or j in the following syllable prevents breaking iu iːu were lowered to eo eːo in Early West Saxon and late Anglian see above The exact conditions for breaking vary somewhat depending on the sound being broken Short ae breaks before h rC lC where C is any consonant Short e breaks before h rC lh lc w i e compared to ae it is also broken before w but is broken before l only in the combination lh and sometimes lc Short i breaks before h rC w However it does not break before wi and in the Anglian dialects breaking before rCi happens only in the combination rzi e g Anglian iorre anger from irzija but afirran from a firrijana Long i and ǣ break only before h Examples weorpan ˈweorpɑn to throw lt ˈwerpan wearp waeɑrp threw sing lt waerp feoh feox money lt feh feaht faeaxt fought sing lt faeht healp haeaɫp helped sing lt haelp but no breaking in helpan to help because the consonant after l is not h feorr feorr far lt ferr feallan ˈfaeɑllɑn to fall lt ˈfaellan but tellan lt earlier ˈtaelljan is not broken because of the following j eolh eoɫx elk lt elh liornian leornian ˈliurniɑn ˈleorniɑn to learn lt earlier ˈlirnoːjan neah near naeːɑx cf nigh lt naeːh leon to lend leːon lt liːun lt ˈliuhan lt ˈliːhan The i mutation of broken iu eo aea whether long or short is spelled ie possibly iy see above Examples hwierfth turns intr lt ˈhwiurfi8 i mutation lt ˈhwirfi8 breaking lt Proto Germanic hwirbithi lt early Proto Germanic hwerbithi hwierfan to turn tr lt ˈhwaearfijan i mutation lt ˈhwaerfijan breaking lt ˈhwarfijan a fronting lt Proto Germanic hwarbijana niehst nearest cf next lt ˈnaeːahist i mutation lt ˈnaeːhist breaking lt ˈnaːhist a fronting lt Proto Germanic nehist liehtan to lighten lt ˈliːuhtijan i mutation lt ˈliːhtijan breaking lt Proto Germanic lihtijanaNote that in some dialects ae was backed retracted to a ɑ rather than broken when occurring in the circumstances described above that would normally trigger breaking This happened in the dialect of Anglia that partially underlies Modern English and explains why Old English ceald appears as Modern English cold actually from Anglian Old English cald rather than cheald the expected result of ceald Both breaking and retraction are fundamentally phenomena of assimilation to a following velar consonant While w is in fact a velar consonant h l and r are less obviously so It is therefore assumed that at least at the time of the occurrence of breaking and retraction several hundred years before recorded Old English h was pronounced x or similar at least when following a vowel and l and r before a consonant had a velar or retroflex quality and were already pronounced ɫ and rˠ or similar A restoration Edit After breaking occurred short ae and in some dialects long aeː as well was backed to a ɑ when there was a back vowel in the following syllable 7 This is called a restoration because it partly restored original a which had earlier been fronted to ae see above Note The situation is complicated somewhat by a later change called second fronting but this did not affect the standard West Saxon dialect of Old English Because strong masculine and neuter nouns have back vowels in plural endings alternations with ae in the singular vs a in the plural are common in this noun class ae a alternation in masculine and neuter strong nounsCase Masculine NeuterSingular Plural Singular PluralNominative and Accusative daeġ dagas faet fatuGenitive daeġes daga faetes fataDative daeġe dagum faete fatumA restoration occurred before the ō of the weak verb suffix ōj although this surfaces in Old English as the front vowel i as in macian to make lt makōjan Breaking see above occurred between a fronting and a restoration This order is necessary to account for words like slean to slay pronounced slaeːɑn from original slahan ˈslahan gt ˈslaehan a fronting gt ˈslaeɑhɑn breaking inhibits a restoration gt ˈslaeɑ ɑn h loss gt slaeːɑn vowel coalescence compensatory lengthening This section s factual accuracy is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on Talk Phonological history of Old English Please help to ensure that disputed statements are reliably sourced April 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message A restoration interacted in a tricky fashion with a fronting Anglo Frisian brightening to produce e g faran to go from Proto Germanic farana but faren gone from Proto Germanic faranaz Basically Step to go gone Reason1 farana faranaz original form2 farana loss of final z3 faraena faraenae Anglo Frisian brightening4 farana a restoration5 faran faraen loss of final short vowels6 faran faren collapse of unstressed short front vowels to e Note that the key difference is in steps 3 and 4 where nasalised a is unaffected by a fronting even though the sequence an is in fact affected since it occurs in an unstressed syllable This leads to a final syllable difference between a and ae which is transferred to the preceding syllable in step 4 The presence of back a in the stem of both forms is not directly explainable by sound change and appears to have been the result of simple analogical levelling Palatalization Edit Palatalization of the velar consonants k and ɡ occurred in certain environments mostly involving front vowels The phoneme ɡ at that time had two allophones ɡ after n or when geminated and ɣ everywhere else This palatalisation is similar to what occurred in Italian and Swedish When palatalised k became tʃ sk became ʃ ɡ became dʒ ɣ became ʝ a voiced palatal fricative it would later become j but not before the loss of older j in certain positions discussed below The contexts for palatalisation were sometimes different for different sounds Before i iː j for example ċidan to chide beċ books from earlier bōkiz seċan seek from earlier sōkijana k gt tʃ bryċġ bridge from earlier West Germanic ˈbruɡɡju after Proto Germanic brugjō ɡɡ gt ddʒ ġiefth gives ɣ gt j Before other front vowels and diphthongs in the case of word initial k and all ɣ for example ċeorl churl ċeas chose sg ċeald cold initial k gt tʃ ġeaf jaef gave ġeard yard ɣ gt j After i iː possibly with an intervening n unless a back vowel followed for example iċ I diċ ditch dike k gt tʃ In wicu week the k is not affected due to the following u For ɣ and sk only after other front vowels e eː ae aeː unless a back vowel followed for example weġ way naeġl nail mǣġ relative ɣ gt j fisċ fish sk gt ʃ In wegas ways the ɣ is not affected due to the following ɑ In ascian ask from earlier aiskōjana the sk remains due to the ō For word initial sk always even when followed by a back vowel or r 8 for example sċip ship sċuldor shoulder sċort short sċrud dress giving modern shroud sk gt ʃ The palatals tʃ and dʒ reverted to their non palatal equivalents k and g when they came to stand immediately before a consonant even if this occurred at a significantly later period as when seċith seeks became secth and senġith singes became sength Palatalization occurred after a restoration and before i mutation although it is unclear whether it occurred before or after h loss Thus it did not occur in galan to sing cf modern English regale with the first a backed from ae due to a restoration Similarly palatalisation occurred in daeġ day but not in a restored dagas days cf dialectal English dawes days or in dagung dawn where the w represents the reflex of unpalatalised ɣ Nor did it occur in cyning king cemban to comb or ges geese where the front vowels y e eː developed from earlier u a oː due to i mutation In many instances where a ċ c ġ g or sċ sc alternation would be expected within a paradigm it was levelled out by analogy at some point in the history of the language For example the velar of secth he seeks has replaced the palatal of seċan to seek in Modern English on the other hand the palatalised forms of beseċan have replaced the velar forms giving modern beseech The sounds k tʃ and ɡ j had almost certainly split into distinct phonemes by Late West Saxon the dialect in which the majority of Old English documents are written This is suggested by such near minimal pairs as drincan ˈdriŋkɑn drink vs drenċan ˈdrentʃɑn drench and ges ɡeːs geese vs ġe jeː you Nevertheless there are few true minimal pairs and velars and palatals often alternate with each other in ways reminiscent of allophones for example ċeosan ˈtʃeːozan to choose vs curon ˈkuron chose plural form ġeotan ˈjeːotan to pour vs guton ˈɡuton poured plural form The voiced velars ɡ and ɣ were still allophones of a single phoneme although by now ɡ was the form used in initial position similarly their respective palatalised reflexes dʒ and j are analysed as allophones of a single phoneme j at this stage This j also included older instances of j which derived from Proto Germanic j and could stand before back vowels as in ġeong junɡ young from PGmc jungaz and ġeoc jok yoke from PGmc juka See also Old English phonology dorsal consonants Standard Old English spelling did not reflect the split and used the same letter c for both k and tʃ and g for both ɡ ɡ ɣ and j j dʒ In the standard modernised orthography as used here the velar and palatal variants are distinguished with a diacritic c stands for k ċ for tʃ g for ɡ and ɣ and ġ for j and dʒ The geminates of these are written cc ċċ cg ċġ Loanwords from Old Norse typically do not display any palatalisation showing that at the time they were borrowed the palatal velar distinction was no longer allophonic and the two sets were now separate phonemes Compare for example the modern doublet shirt and skirt these both derive from the same Germanic root but shirt underwent Old English palatalisation whereas skirt comes from a Norse borrowing which did not Similarly give an unpalatalised Norse borrowing existed alongside and eventually displaced the regularly palatalised yive Other later loanwords similarly escaped palatalisation compare ship from palatalised Old English sċip with skipper borrowed from unpalatalised Dutch schipper 9 Second fronting Edit Second fronting fronted a to ae and ae to e later than related processes of a fronting and a restoration 10 Second fronting did not affect the standard West Saxon dialect of Old English In fact it took place only in a relatively small section of the area English Midlands where the Mercian dialect was spoken Mercian itself was a subdialect of the Anglian dialect which includes all of Central and Northern England Palatal diphthongization Edit The front vowels e e ae and ǣ usually become the diphthongs ie ie ea and ea after ċ ġ and sċ 11 sċieran to cut sċear cut past sing sċearon cut past pl which belongs to the same conjugation class IV as beran to carry baer carried sing bǣron carried pl ġiefan to give ġeaf gave sing ġeafon gave pl ġiefen given which belongs to the same conjugation class V as tredan to tread traed trod sing trǣdon trod pl treden trodden In a similar way the back vowels u o and a were spelled as eo and ea after ċ ġ and sċ ġung gt ġeong young cf German jung sċolde gt sċeolde should cf German sollte sċadu gt sċeadu shadow cf Dutch schaduw Most likely the second process was simply a spelling convention and a o u actually did not change in pronunciation the vowel u continued to be pronounced in ġeong o in sċeolde and a in sċeadu This is suggested by their developments in Middle and Modern English If ġeong and sċeolde had the diphthong eo they would develop into Modern English yeng and sheeld instead of young and should There is less agreement about the first process The traditional view is that e e ae and ǣ actually became diphthongs 12 13 but a minority view is that they remained as monophthongs 14 sċieran ˈʃerɑn sċear ʃaer sċearon ˈʃaeːron ġiefan ˈjevɑn ġeaf jaef ġeafon ˈjaeːvon ġiefen ˈjeven The main arguments in favour of this view are the fact that the corresponding process involving back vowels is indeed purely orthographic and that diphthongizations like ae aeɑ and e iy if this contrary to the traditional view is the correct interpretation of orthographic ie are phonetically unmotivated in the context of a preceding palatal or postalveolar consonant In addition both some advocates of the traditional view of ie and some advocates of the interpretation iy believe that the i in ie after palatal consonants never expressed a separate sound Thus it has been argued that the iy pronunciation only applied to the instances of ie expressing the sound resulting from i mutation 15 In any case it is thought plausible that the two merged as ie at a fairly early stage 15 Metathesis of r Edit Original sequences of an r followed by a short vowel metathesized with the vowel and r switching places This normally only occurred when the next following consonant was s or n and sometimes d The r could be initial or follow another consonant but not a vowel Before s berstan to burst Icelandic bresta gaers grass Gothic gras therscan to thresh Gothic thriskan Before n byrnan beornan to burn intr Gothic brinnan irnan to run Gothic rinnan iren iron lt isren lt isern Gothic eisarn waerna wren Icelandic rindill aern house Gothic razn Before d thirda third Gothic thridja Northumbrian bird chick nestling standard bryd Not all potential words to which metathesis can apply are actually affected and many of the above words also appear in their unmetathesized form e g graes grass rinnan to run wrenna wren rare forms brustaen burst past part threscenne to thresh onbran set fire to past isern iron ren house thridda third briddes birds in Chaucer Many of the words have come down to Modern English in their unmetathesized forms Metathesis in the other direction occasionally occurs before ht e g wrohte worked cf obsolescent wrought Gothic wurhta Northumbrian breht bryht bright Gothic bairhts fryhto fright Gothic faurhtei wryhta maker cf wright Old Saxon wurhtio Unmetathesized forms of all of these words also occur in Old English The phenomenon occurred in most Germanic languages I mutation i umlaut Edit nbsp Development of Old English vowels under i mutation Like most other Germanic languages Old English underwent a process known as i mutation or i umlaut This involved the fronting or raising of vowels under the influence of i ː or j in the following syllable Among its effects were the new front rounded vowels y ː o ː and likely the diphthong iy see above The original following i ː or j that triggered the umlaut was often lost at a later stage The umlaut is responsible for such modern English forms as men feet mice compare the singulars man foot mouse elder eldest compare old fill compare full length compare long etc For details of the changes see Germanic umlaut and particularly the section on i mutation in Old English Medial syncopation Edit In medial syllables short low and mid vowels a ae e are deleted in all open syllables 16 Short high vowels i u are deleted in open syllables following a long syllable but usually remain following a short syllable this is part of the process of high vowel loss Syncopation of low mid vowels occurred after i mutation and before high vowel loss An example demonstrating that it occurred after i mutation is maeġden maiden Stage Process ResultProto Germanic Original form magadinaFinal a loss magadinAnglo Frisian Anglo Frisian brightening maegaedinPalatalization maeġaedinI mutation maeġedinMedial syncopation maeġdinOld English Unstressed vowel reduction maeġdenIf the syncopation of short low mid vowels had occurred before i mutation the result in Old English would be meġden An example showing that syncopation occurred before high vowel loss is saw o l soul PG saiwalō gt sawalu gt sawlu medial syncopation gt sawl soul By form sawol is due to vowel epenthesis Had it occurred after high vowel loss the result in Old English would be sawlu High vowel loss Edit In an unstressed open syllable i and u including final u from earlier oː were lost when following a long syllable i e one with a long vowel or diphthong or followed by two consonants but not when following a short syllable i e one with a short vowel followed by a single consonant 17 This took place in two types of contexts Absolutely word final In a medial open syllableWord finalHigh vowel loss caused many paradigms to split depending on the length of the root syllable with u or e from i appearing after short but not long syllables For example feminine ō stem nouns in the nom sg PG gebō gt OE ġiefu gift but PG laizō gt OE lar teaching neuter a stem nouns in the nom acc pl PG skipō gt OE scipu ships but PG wurdō gt OE word words masculine i stem nouns in the nom acc sg PG winiz gt OE wine friend but PG gastiz gt OE ġiest guest u stem nouns in the nom acc sg PG sunuz gt OE sunu son but PG handuz gt OE hand hand strong adjectives in the feminine nom sg and neuter nom acc pl PG tilō gt OE tilu good fem nom sg neut nom acc pl but PG gōdō gt OE gōd good fem nom sg neut nom acc pl weak class 1 imperatives OE freme perform vs hier hear PG stems frami and hauzi respectively it s unclear if the imperatives ended in i or i This loss affected the plural of root nouns e g PrePG pōdes gt PG fōtiz gt fo ti gt OE fet feet nom All such nouns had long syllable stems and so all were without ending in the plural with the plural marked only by i mutation Two syllable nouns consisting of two short syllables were treated as if they had a single long syllable a type of equivalence found elsewhere in the early Germanic languages e g in the handling of Sievers law in Proto Norse as well as in the metric rules of Germanic alliterative poetry Hence final high vowels are dropped However in a two syllable noun consisting of a long first syllable the length of the second syllable determines whether the high vowel is dropped Examples all are neuter nouns 18 Short short werod troop pl werod treated as equivalent to a single long syllable or more correctly as a single long foot Short long faereld journey pl faereld Long short heafod head pl heafdu from heafodu Long long isern iron pl isernNote also the following apparent exceptions OE witu punishments pl of wite lt PG witijō OE riċ i u kingdoms pl of riċe lt PG rikijō OE wildu wild fem of wilde lt PG wildijō OE strengthu strength lt PG strangithō In reality these aren t exceptions because at the time of high vowel loss the words had the same two syllable long short root structure as heafod see above As a result high vowel loss must have occurred after i mutation but before the loss of internal i j which occurred shortly after i mutation Word medialParadigm split also occurred medially as a result of high vowel loss e g in the past tense forms of Class I weak forms PG dōmide gt OE demde he judged PG framide gt OE fremede he did performed a duty Normally syncopation i e vowel loss does not occur in closed syllables e g Englisċe English ǣresta earliest sċeawunge a showing inspection each word with an inflected ending following it However syncopation passes its usual limits in certain West Saxon verbal and adjectival forms e g the present tense of strong verbs birst you carry lt PG beris tu birth he carries lt PG berith similarly demst demth you judge he judges and comparative adjectives ġinġsta youngest lt PG jungisto similarly strenġsta strongest lǣsta least lt lǣsesta lt PG laisisto When both medial and final high vowel loss can operate in a single word medial but not final loss occurs 19 PG strangithō gt WG strangithu gt strengthu strength PG haubudō gt WG haubudu gt heafdu heads This implies that final high vowel loss must precede medial high vowel loss else the result would be strength heafd Loss of i j Edit Internal j and its Sievers law variant ij when they still remained in an internal syllable were lost just after high vowel loss but only after a long syllable Hence PG witijō gt WG witiju gt OE witu punishments if ij were lost before high vowel loss the result would be wit PG dōmijana gt do mijan after i mutation gt OE deman to judge cf NE deem PG satjana gt WG sattjana gt saettjana after Anglo Frisian brightening gt settjan after i mutation gt OE settan to set Note that in Proto Germanic the non Sievers law variant j occurred only after short syllables but due to West Germanic gemination a consonant directly preceding the j was doubled creating a long syllable West Germanic gemination didn t apply to r leaving a short syllable and hence j wasn t lost in such circumstances PG arjana gt OE erian to plow By Sievers law the variant ij occurred only after long syllables and thus was always lost when it was still word internal at this point When j and ij became word final after loss of a following vowel or vowel z they were converted into i and i respectively The former was affected by high vowel loss surfacing as e when not deleted i e after r while the latter always surfaces as e PG kunja gt WG kunnja gt kunni gt kynni gt OE cynn kin family kind PG harjaz gt WG harja West Germanic gemination didn t apply to r gt hari gt heri gt OE here army PG witija gt witi gt OE wite punishment It is possible that loss of medial j occurred slightly earlier than loss of ij and in particular before high vowel loss This appears to be necessary to explain short jō stem words like nytt use PG nutjō gt WG nuttju gt nyttju by i mutation gt nyttu by j loss gt OE nytt by high vowel deletion If high vowel deletion occurred first the result would presumably be an unattested nytte A similar loss of i j occurred in the other West Germanic languages although after the earliest records of those languages especially Old Saxon which still has written settian heliand corresponding to Old English settan to set hǣlend savior Some details are different as the form kunni with retained i is found in Old Saxon Old Dutch and Old High German but note Old Frisian kenn kin This did not affect the new j lt ʝ formed from palatalisation of PG ɣ suggesting that it was still a palatal fricative at the time of the change For example PG wrōgijana gt early OE ˈwroːʝijan gt OE wreġan ˈwreːjan Back mutation Edit Back mutation sometimes back umlaut guttural umlaut u umlaut or velar umlaut is a change that took place in late prehistoric Old English and caused short e i and sometimes a to break into a diphthong eo io ea respectively similar to breaking when a back vowel u o ō a occurred in the following syllable 20 Examples seofon seven lt sebun cf Gothic sibun heol o stor hiding place cover cf English holster lt earlier helustr lt hulestr lt hulistran cf Gothic hulistr eofor boar lt eburaz cf Old High German ebur heorot hart lt herutaz cf Old High German hiruz mioluc meoluc milk lt melukz cf Gothic miluks liofast leofast you sg live lt libast ealu ale lt aluthNote that io turned into eo in Early West Saxon and late Anglian A number of restrictions governed whether back mutation took place Generally it only took place when a single consonant followed the vowel being broken In the standard West Saxon dialect back mutation only took place before labials f b w and liquids l r In the Anglian dialect it took place before all consonants except c g Anglian meodu mead eosol donkey vs West Saxon medu esol In the Kentish dialect it took place before all consonants Kentish breogo price vs West Saxon Anglian bregu brego Back mutation of a normally took place only in the Mercian subdialect of the Anglian dialect Standard ealu ale is a borrowing from Mercian Similar borrowings are poetic beadu battle and eafora son heir cf Gothic afar many poetic words were borrowed from Mercian On the other hand standard bealu evil arch bale and bearu grove owe their ea due to breaking their forms at the time of breaking were balwa barwaz and the genitive singulars in Old English are bealwes bearwes Anglian smoothing Edit In the Anglian i e Mercian and Northumbrian dialects of Old English a process called smoothing undid many of the effects of breaking In particular before a velar h ɡ k or before an r or l followed by a velar diphthongs were reduced to monophthongs 21 Note that the context for smoothing is similar to the context for the earlier process of breaking that produced many of the diphthongs in the first place In particular ea gt ae before a velar e before r or l velar ea gt e eo gt e eo gt e io gt i io gt iThis change preceded h loss and vowel assimilation The diphthongs ie and ie did not exist in Anglian or in fact in any dialect other than West Saxon H loss Edit In the same contexts where the voiceless fricatives f 8 s become voiced i e between vowels and between a voiced consonant and a vowel h is lost 22 with compensatory lengthening of the preceding vowel if it is short 23 This occurs after breaking hence breaking before rh and lh takes place regardless of whether the h is lost by this rule An unstressed short vowel is absorbed into the preceding long vowel Examples sċōs shoe gen lt ˈʃoː es lt ˈʃoːhes cf sċōh nom feos money gen lt ˈfeːo es lt ˈfeohes lt ˈfehes cf feoh nom wealas foreigners Welsh people lt ˈwaealhas lt ˈwaelhas cf wealh sing Vowel assimilation Edit Two vowels that occurred in hiatus i e next to each other with no consonant separating collapsed into a single long vowel 24 Many occurrences were due to h loss but some came from other sources e g loss of j or w after a front vowel Loss of j occurred early in Proto Germanic times Loss of w occurred later after i umlaut If the first vowel was e or i long or short and the second vowel was a back vowel a diphthong resulted Examples sċōs shoe gen lt Proto Germanic skōhas see under h loss feos money gen lt Proto Germanic fehas see under h loss freond friend lt friond lt Proto Germanic frijōndz two syllables cf Gothic frijōnds sǣm sea dat pl lt sǣum lt sǣwum lt sǣwimiz lt Proto Germanic saiwimizPalatal umlaut Edit Palatal umlaut is a process whereby short e eo io appear as i occasionally ie before final ht hs hth Examples riht right cf German recht cniht boy mod knight cf German Knecht siex six cf German sechs briht bryht bright cf non metathesized Old English forms beorht Anglian berht Dutch brecht hlihth he laughs lt hlehth lt hlaehith i mutation lt Proto Germanic hlahith cf hliehhan to laugh lt Proto Germanic hlahjana Unstressed vowel reduction Edit See also Proto Germanic Later developments and Kaluza s law There was steady vowel reduction in unstressed syllables in a number of stages In West Germanic times absolutely final non nasal ō but not e g ōz o or ǭ was raised and shortened to u All other final syllable ō were lowered to a By Anglo Frisian brightening these ended up as ǣ later ae Overlong o as well as ō in medial syllables were unaffected Although vowel nasality persisted at least up through Anglo Frisian times and likely through the time of a restoration it was eventually lost in stressed as well as unstressed syllables with non nasal vowels the result Medial syncopation deleted word medial short unstressed low mid vowels in open syllables High vowel loss deleted short unstressed high vowels i and u in open syllables following a long syllable whether word final or word medial All unstressed long and overlong vowels were shortened with remaining long ō o shortening to a This produced five final syllable short vowels which remained into early documented Old English back a u front ae e i By the time of the majority of Old English documents however all three front short vowels had merged into e Absolutely final u tends to be written u sometimes o but before a consonant it is normally written o e g seovon seven lt PG sibun Exceptions are the endings ung s um uc and when the root has u in it e g duguth band of warriors prosperity 25 Final syllable e is written i in the endings ing iġ l iċ isċ iht A table showing these developments in more detail is found in Proto Germanic Later developments Vowel lengthening Edit In the late 8th or early 9th century short stressed vowels were lengthened before certain groups of consonants ld mb nd ng rd rl rn rs vowel 26 Some of the lengthened vowels would be shortened again by or during the Middle English period this applied particularly before the clusters beginning r Examples of words in which the effect of lengthening has been preserved are ċild gt ċild gt mod child aɪ but lengthening did not occur if another consonant immediately followed as in ċildru giving modern children with ɪ ald gt ald gt mod old oʊ but lengthening did not occur in the antepenultimate syllable as in aldormann giving modern alderman with an originally short a climban gt climban gt mod climb aɪ grund gt grund gt mod ground aʊ lang gt lang gt mod long a went regularly to ō but was shortened in this position in late Middle English compare Scots lang where the shortening occurred first Diphthong changes EditIn Early West Saxon io and io were merged into eo and eo Also the Early West Saxon diphthongs ie and ie developed into what is known as unstable i merging into y ː in Late West Saxon For further detail see Old English diphthongs All of the remaining Old English diphthongs were monophthongised in the early Middle English period see Middle English stressed vowel changes Dialects EditOld English dialects and their sound changes 27 West Saxon Northumbrian Mercian KentishProto Germanicǣ gt e no yespalataldiphthongization yes limited no noretractionae gt a rC no yessmoothing yesa gt o Nback mutation limited yesae gt e no no yesAnglo Frisian ǣ gt e noy ȳ gt e eOld English had four major dialect groups West Saxon Mercian Northumbrian and Kentish West Saxon and Kentish occurred in the south approximately to the south of the River Thames Mercian constituted the middle section of the country divided from the southern dialects by the Thames and from Northumbrian by the Humber and Mersey rivers Northumbrian encompassed the area between the Humber and the Firth of Forth including what is now southeastern Scotland but was once part of the Kingdom of Northumbria In the south the easternmost portion was Kentish and everywhere else was West Saxon Mercian and Northumbrian are often grouped together as Anglian The biggest differences occurred between West Saxon and the other groups The differences occurred mostly in the front vowels and particularly the diphthongs However Northumbrian was distinguished from the rest by much less palatalisation Forms in Modern English with hard k and ɡ where a palatalised sound would be expected from Old English are due either to Northumbrian influence or to direct borrowing from Scandinavian Note that in fact the lack of palatalisation in Northumbrian was probably due to heavy Scandinavian influence The early history of Kentish was similar to Anglian but sometime around the ninth century all of the front vowels ae e y long and short merged into e long and short The further discussion concerns the differences between Anglian and West Saxon with the understanding that Kentish other than where noted can be derived from Anglian by front vowel merger The primary differences were Original post Anglo Frisian brightening ǣ was raised to e in Anglian but remained in West Saxon This occurred before other changes such as breaking and did not affect ǣ caused by i umlaut of a Hence e g dǣlan to divide lt dailijan appears the same in both dialects but West Saxon slǣpan to sleep appears as slepan in Anglian Note the corresponding vowel difference in the spelling of deal lt dǣlan vs sleep lt Anglian slepan The West Saxon vowels ie ie caused by i umlaut of long and short ea eo io did not appear in Anglian Instead i umlaut of ea and rare eo is spelled e and i umlaut of io remains as io Breaking of short ae to ea did not happen in Anglian before l and a consonant instead the vowel was retracted to a When mutated by i umlaut it appears again as ae vs West Saxon ie Hence Anglian cald cold vs West Saxon ċeald Merger of eo and io long and short occurred early in West Saxon but much later in Anglian Many instances of diphthongs in Anglian including the majority of cases caused by breaking were turned back into monophthongs again by the process of Anglian smoothing which occurred before c h g alone or preceded by r or l This accounts for some of the most noticeable differences between standard i e West Saxon Old English and Modern English spelling E g eage eye became ege in Anglian neah near became Anglian neh later raised to nih in the transition to Middle English by raising of e before h hence nigh in Modern English neahst nearest become Anglian nehst shortened to nehst in late Old English by vowel shortening before three consonants hence next in Modern English As mentioned above Modern English derives mostly from the Anglian dialect rather than the standard West Saxon dialect of Old English However since London sits on the Thames near the boundary of the Anglian West Saxon and Kentish dialects some West Saxon and Kentish forms have entered Modern English For example bury has its spelling derived from West Saxon and its pronunciation from Kentish see below The Northumbrian dialect which was spoken as far north as Edinburgh survives as the Scots language spoken in Scotland and parts of Northern Ireland The distinguishing feature of Northumbrian the lack of palatalisation of velars is still evident in doublets between Scots and Modern English such as kirk church brig bridge kist chest yeuk itch OE ġyċċan lt PGmc jukjana However most of the phonetic differences between Scots and Modern English postdate the Old English period see Phonological history of Scots for more details Summary of vowel developments EditSee also Phonological history of English Through Middle English NOTE Another version of this table is available at Phonological history of English Through Middle English This covers the same changes from a more diachronic perspective It includes less information on the specific differences between the Anglian and West Saxon dialects of Old English but includes much more information on the Proto Indo European changes leading up to the vowels below and the Middle English vowels that resulted from them NOTE This table only describes the changes in accented syllables Vowel changes in unaccented syllables were very different and much more extensive In general long vowels were reduced to short vowels and sometimes deleted entirely and short vowels were very often deleted All remaining vowels were reduced to only the vowels u a and e and sometimes o o also sometimes appears as a variant of unstressed u West Germanic Condition Process Old English Examples i umlaut a Anglo Frisian brightening ae e dagaz gt daeġ day fastaz gt faest fast firm batizǫ gt betera better taljana gt tellan to tell n m a o e namǫ gt nama name langaz gt lang long long mannz manniz gt man mon man plur men men mf nth ns Ingvaeonic nasal spirant law ō e samftijaz samfto gt sefte sōfta gt sōfte soft tanths tanthiz gt tōth plur teth tooth gans gansiz gt gōs goose plur ges geese West Saxon h rC lC breaking ea ie aldaz aldizǫ gt eald old ieldra older cf elder armaz gt earm arm Lat arca gt earc arc darnija gt dierne secret ahtau gt eahta eight Anglian h breaking Anglian smoothing ae e ahtau gt aehta eight Anglian lC retraction a ae aldaz aldizǫ gt ald old aeldra older cf elder Anglian rc rg rh breaking Anglian smoothing e e Lat arca gt erc arc Anglian rC C not c g h breaking ea e armaz gt earm arm darnija gt derne secret West Saxon hV hr hl breaking h loss ea ie slahana gt slean to slay stahlija gt stiele steel Anglian hV hr hl breaking Anglian smoothing h loss ea e slahana ithi gt slean to slay 3rd sing pres indic sleth slays stahlija gt stele steel West Saxon k g j palatal diphthongization ea ie Lat castra gt ċeaster town fortress cf names in caster chester gastiz gt ġiest guest before a o u A a restoration a by analogy ae plur dagos gt dagas days talō gt talu tale bakana ithi gt bacan to bake 3rd sing pres indic baecth bakes mostly non West Saxon before later a o u back mutation ea eo B alu gt ealu ale awi gt eowu ewe asiluz gt non West Saxon eosol donkey before hs ht hth final iz palatal umlaut N A i occ ie nahtiz gt nieht gt niht night e C e N A C etana gt etan to eat m i N A nemana gt niman to take West Saxon h rC lc lh wV breaking eo N A fehtana gt feohtan to fight berkana gt beorcan to bark werthana gt weordan to become Anglian h rc rg rh breaking Anglian smoothing e N A fehtana gt fehtan to fight berkana gt bercan to bark Anglian rC C not c g h lc lh wV breaking eo N A werthana gt weordan to become hV hr hl breaking Anglian smoothing h loss eo N A sehwana gt seon to see late final hs ht hth palatal umlaut i occ ie N A sehs gt siex six rehtaz gt riht right West Saxon k g j palatal diphthongization ie N A skerana gt sċieran shear i i i fiska gt fisċ fish itithi gt 3rd sing pres indic iteth eats nimithi gt 3rd sing pres indic nimeth takes skirithi gt 3rd sing pres indic sċirth shears mf nth ns Ingvaeonic nasal spirant law i i fimf gt fif five West Saxon h rC breaking io gt eo ie Pihtos gt Piohtas Peohtas Picts lirnōjana gt liornian leornian to learn hirdijaz B gt hierde shepherd wirthithi gt 3rd sing pres indic wierth becomes Anglian h rc rg rh breaking Anglian smoothing i i stihtōjana gt stihtian to establish Anglian rC C not c g h breaking io gt eo i a firrijana gt afirran to remove cf feorr far West Saxon hV hr hl breaking h loss io gt eo ie twihōjana gt twioġan tweon to doubt Anglian hV hr hl breaking Anglian smoothing h loss io gt eo i twihōjana gt twioġan tweon to doubt sihwithi gt 3rd sing pres indic sith sees before w breaking io gt eo i niwulaz gt niowul neowul prostrate spiwiz gt spiwe vomiting before a o u back mutation i io eo N A miluks gt mioluc meolc milk u u y sunuz gt sunu son kumana ithi gt cuman to come 3rd sing pres indic cymth comes guldijana gt gyldan to gild mf nth ns Ingvaeonic nasal spirant law u ȳ munths gt muth mouth wunskijana gt wȳsċan wish before non nasal a e o D a mutation o by analogy e hurna gt horn horn brukanaz gt brocen broken duhter duhtriz gt dohter daughter plur dehter daughters hV hr hl h loss u ȳ uhumistaz gt ȳmest highest e gt a Anglo Frisian brightening West Saxon ǣ ǣ slapana gt slǣpan to sleep Lat strata gt strǣt street dadiz gt dǣd deed Anglian e e slapana gt slepan to sleep Lat strata gt stret street dadiz gt ded deed Lat caseus gt ċese cheese nahaz nahistaz gt neh near cf nigh superl nehst nearest cf next West Saxon k g j palatal diphthongization ea ie jarō gt ġear year Lat caseus gt ċiese cheese n m ō e manǫ gt mōna moon kwaniz gt kwen queen West Saxon h breaking ea ie nahaz nahistaz gt neah near cf nigh superl niehst nearest cf next w ga go gu la lo lu a restoration a ǣ knawana ithi gt cnawan to know 3rd sing pres indic cnǣwth knows e e e me da gt med reward ō ō e fōts fōtiz gt fōt foot plur fet feet i i i wiba gt wif wife lihithi gt Anglian 3rd sing pres indic lith lends West Saxon h breaking io gt eo ie lihana ithi gt leon to lend 3rd sing pres indic liehth lends u u ȳ mus musiz gt mus mouse plur mȳs mice ai a ǣ stainaz gt stan stone kaisaraz gt casere emperor hwaitija gt hwǣte wheat au ea West Saxon ie auzǭ gt eare ear hauzijana gt hieran to hear hauh hauhist gt heah high superl hiehst highest Anglian e auzǭ gt eare ear hauzijana gt heran to hear Anglian c g h rc rg rh lc lg lh Anglian smoothing e e hauh hauhist gt heh high superl hehst highest eu E eo N A E deupaz gt deop deep fleugǭ gt fleoge fly beudana gt beodan to command Anglian c g h rc rg rh lc lg lh Anglian smoothing e N A fleugǭ gt flege fly iu E N A West Saxon ie biudithi gt 3rd sing pres indic biett commands liuhtijana gt liehtan to lighten Anglian io biudithi gt 3rd sing pres indic biott commands Anglian c g h rc rg rh lc lg lh Anglian smoothing N A i liuhtijana gt lihtan to lighten The process of a restoration as described here reversed the previous process of Anglo Frisian brightening leaving an a However it was blocked when an i or j followed in the next syllable instead a was converted to ae by Anglo Frisian brightening and then umlauted to e This accounts for the outcomes of PGmc talō gt talu tale vs the related PGmc taljana gt tellan to tell However in some instances when a restoration was blocked the ae that remained from Anglo Frisian brightening was still reverted to a by analogy with related words where a restoration did apply this a was then umlauted to ae This happened especially in verbs when some forms e g the third person singular present indicative had umlaut and other forms e g the infinitive did not for example PGmc bakana gt OE bacan to bake vs PG bakithi gt OE baecth he bakes This accounts for the by analogy notation in the i umlaut column The following diagrams show the processes involved in more detail No analogyStep tale to tell Reason1 talō taljana original forms2 talu talljan after various changes irrelevant here e g West Germanic gemination 3 taelu taelljan Anglo Frisian brightening4 talu taelljan a restoration5 talu taelljan unaffected by analogy6 talu telljan i mutation7 talu tellan after further changes irrelevant hereAnalogyStep to bake he bakes Reason1 bakana bakithi original forms2 bakan bakith after various changes irrelevant here3 baekan baekith Anglo Frisian brightening4 bakan baekith a restoration5 bakan bakith by analogy with the infinitive6 bakan baekith i mutation7 bacan baecth after further changes irrelevant hereAnalogy took place between related forms of a single lexical item e g different forms of the same verb or noun It generally did not take place between related lexical items derived from the same root e g between talu tale and tellan to tell a b This entry is misleading Back mutation actually took place after i mutation this is why the result of applying both i mutation and back mutation to a is eo rather than ie the normal i mutation of ea Note also that back mutation applies only when the following syllable contains a o u while i mutation applies only when the following syllable contains i j hence you would not expect both back mutation and i mutation to apply in a single word All instances in which this occurs had one suffix substituted for another between the operation of the two processes For example Latin asellum donkey gt Proto Germanic asilu replacement of Latin diminutive suffix ell with similar Proto Germanic diminutive suffix il gt aesil a fronting gt esil i mutation gt esel a normal change in unstressed syllables gt esol substitution of more common ol for less common el gt eosol back mutation Proto Germanic awi ewe gt awi vowel reduction in unstressed syllables gt ewi i mutation gt ewu feminine i disappeared in prehistoric Old English and was replaced with u a similar change occurred in e g menigu multitude cf Gothic managei gt eowu back mutation a b Proto Indo European e was already mutated to i in Proto Germanic in two contexts When occurring before n plus consonant and when occurring before i or j The more general i mutation that applied to all vowels in Old English is a separate process that occurred many centuries later although it had the same effect on e Note that due to this earlier change there were few instances of e that could be affected by Old English i mutation For this reason the i mutations of e are listed in parens e g i to indicate that the given results are not due directly to i mutation of e but to i mutation of i or of some vowel derived from it e g io This is also why the Proto West Germanic form of hierde shepherd appears already as hirdijaz with i in the root even though it s clearly related to heord herd Proto West Germanic herdō It is also why there s no entry for mf nth ns under e even though it occurs for all other vowels Furthermore describing i as the i mutation of e or ie as the i mutation of eo is misleading at best In fact as just described e was not mutated to i by i mutation but rather in an i mutation environment i already appeared due to the earlier mutation of e to i Similarly eo from earlier e in a breaking environment was not mutated to ie by i mutation In this case again i already appeared in the i mutation environment which was broken to io due to the breaking environment it was in and this io was then mutated to ie by i mutation Note further that the breaking environments for i were more restrictive than those for e Hence it s possible for post breaking non umlaut context eo to correspond to umlaut context i rather than io e g before lh or lc and therefore for a post umlaut alternation between eo and i to exist Presumably these anomalous alternations were mostly eliminated by analogy A very similar process to what is described in note A resulted in the umlaut of o sometimes appearing as y the normal outcome and sometimes as e by analogy Just like a restoration a mutation which lowered u to o before a e o was blocked by a following i or j and the u that was left over was sometimes changed into o by analogy and sometimes not changed a b c Proto Germanic mutation of e to i before i or j also affected eu producing iu In fact iu occurs only before i or j in the following syllable and eu never occurs in these circumstances That is iu is in fact an allophone of eu It is typically written as iu rather than iu because in the later Germanic dialects the reflexes of the sound do in fact become separate phonemes Changes leading up to Middle and Modern English EditFor a detailed description of the changes between Old English and Middle Modern English see the article on the phonological history of English A summary of the main vowel changes is presented below Note that the spelling of Modern English largely reflects Middle English pronunciation Note also that this table presents only the general developments Many exceptional outcomes occurred in particular environments e g vowels were often lengthened in late Old English before ld nd mb vowels changed in complex ways before r throughout the history of English vowels were diphthongised in Middle English before h new diphthongs arose in Middle English by the combination of vowels with Old English w g ɣ gt w and ġ j etc The only conditional development considered in detail below is Middle English open syllable lengthening Note that in the column on modern spelling CV means a sequence of a single consonant followed by a vowel NOTE In this table abbreviations are used as follows OE Old English WS West Saxon dialect of Old English ME Middle English NE Modern English GA General American generalised U S accent of Modern English RP Received Pronunciation prestige British accent of Modern English leng lengthened by open syllable lengthening occ occasionally superl superlative gt produces by regular sound change gt produces by analogy or irregular changeLate Old English Anglian c 1000 Middle English pronunciation c 1400 Modern English spelling c 1500 Early Modern English pronunciation c 1600 Modern English pronunciation c 2000 Source Example Written asa ae ea a CC often ǣ CC ea CC occ e CC WS ǣ CC a a a ae OE a OE mann gt man OE lamb gt lamb OE sang gt sang OE sacc gt sack OE assa gt ass donkey aOE ae OE faethm embrace gt fathom OE saet gt sat OE aet gt at OE maesse gt mass at church OE ea OE weax gt wax OE healf gt half haef GA OE CC OE ascian gt ask aesk GA OE fǣtt gt fat OE lǣstan gt to last laest GA OE bleddre WS blǣddre gt bladder OE brembel WS brǣmbel gt bramble w not g ck ng nk GA ɑ RP ɒ OE a OE swan gt swan OE wasċan gt to wash OE wann dark gt wanOE ae OE swaeth gt swath OE waesp gt waspOE ea OE wealwian gt to wallow OE swealwe gt swallow bird r ar gt GA ɑr RP ɑː OE heard gt hard OE aerc WS earc gt ark w and r ɔr gt GA ɔr RP ɔː OE ea OE swearm gt swarm OE sweart gt old poetic swart gt swarthy OE weardian gt to ward OE wearm gt warm OE wearnian gt to warn lC l ɔː OE smael gt small OE all WS eall gt all OE walcian WS wealcian to roll gt to walk lm GA ɑ RP ɑː OE aelmesse gt alms Latin palma gt OE palm gt palm RP often f s th ɑː OE glaes gt glass OE graes gt grass OE paeth gt path OE aefter gt after OE ascian ɑːsk gt to ask OE lǣstan lɑːst gt to last leng aː aeː aCV ɛː eː gt ei OE a OE nama gt name OE nacod gt naked OE bacan gt to bakeOE ae OE aecer gt acre OE hwael gt whale OE hraefn gt raven r eːr gt GA ɛr RP ɛe OE a OE caru gt care OE faran gt to fare OE starian gt to staree eo occ y e CC eo CC occ ǣ CC ea CC e e ɛ ɛ OE e OE helpan gt to help OE elh WS eolh gt elk OE tellan gt to tell OE betera gt better OE streċċan gt to stretchOE eo OE seofon gt sevenOE y OE myriġ gt merry OE byrġan gt to bury bɛri OE lyft weak gt left hand OE cnyll gt knellOE CC OE cepte gt kept OE mette gt met OE becnan WS biecnan gt to beckon OE clǣnsian gt to cleanse OE flǣsċ gt flesh OE lǣssa gt less OE freond gt friend frɛnd OE theofth WS thiefth gt theft OE heold gt held r ar ar GA ɑr RP ɑː OE heorte gt heart OE bercan WS beorcan gt to bark OE teoru WS teru gt tar OE steorra gt star w and r ɔr gt GA ɔr RP ɔː AN werra gt war AN werbler gt to warble occ r er ɛr er gt GA er RP ɜː OE e OE sterne WS stierne styrne gt sternOE eo OE eorl gt earl OE eorthe gt earth OE liornian leornian gt to learnOE CC OE herde WS hierde gt heard leng ɛː ea eCV eː iː OE specan gt to speak OE mete gt meat OE beofor gt beaver OE meotan WS metan gt to mete miːt OE eotan WS etan gt to eat OE meodu WS medu gt mead OE yfel gt evil r iːr gt GA ɪr RP ɪe OE spere gt spear OE mere gt mere lake ea e occ ei OE brecan gt to break breik ea occ r eːr gt GA ɛr RP ɛe OE beoran WS beran gt to bear OE pere peru gt pear OE swerian gt to swear OE wer man gt were ea e often th d t v ɛ OE lether gt leather lɛdɚ OE stede gt stead OE weder gt weather OE heofon gt heaven OE hefiġ gt heavy eai y i CC ȳ CC occ eoc ec occ i CV ȳ CV i i ɪ ɪ OE i OE writen gt written OE sittan gt to sit OE fisċ gt fish OE lifer gt liverOE y OE bryċġ gt bridge OE cyssan gt to kiss OE dyde gt did OE synn gt sin OE gyldan gt to gild OE bysiġ gt busy bɪzi OE CC OE wisdōm gt wisdom OE fiftiġ gt fifty OE wȳsċan gt to wish OE cȳthth u gt kith OE fȳst gt fistOE ȳ CV i CV OE ċicen gt chicken OE lȳtel gt littleOE eoc ec OE seoc gt sick OE weoce gt wick OE ec nama gt ME eke name gt nickname r er gt GA er RP ɜː OE gyrdan gt to gird OE fyrst gt first OE styrian gt to stir leng occ eː ee iː iː OE wicu gt week OE pilian gt to peel OE bitela gt beetle eeo ō CC o o ɔ GA ɑ RP ɒ OE o OE god gt god OE beġeondan gt beyondOE CC OE gōdspell gt gospel OE fōddor gt fodder OE fōstrian gt to foster GA f s th g ng ɔː OE moththe gt moth OE cros gt cross OE frost gt frost OE of gt off OE oft gt oft OE sōfte gt soft r ɔr gt GA ɔr RP ɔː OE corn gt corn OE storc gt storc OE storm gt storm leng ɔː oa oCV oː GA ou RP eu OE fola gt foal OE nosu gt nose OE ofer gt over r oːr gt GA ɔr RP ɔː OE borian gt to bore OE fore gt fore OE bord gt board oa ou occ y u CC w e eo o y r u u o ʊ ʌ OE u OE bucc gt buck bʌk OE lufian gt to love lʌv OE uppe gt up OE on bufan gt aboveOE y OE myċel gt ME muchel gt much OE blysċan gt to blush OE cyċġel gt cudgel OE clyċċan gt to clutch OE sċytel gt shuttleOE CC OE dust gt dust OE tusc gt tusk OE rust gt rust b f p and l sh ʊ OE full gt full fʊl OE bula gt bull OE bysċ gt bush r er gt GA er RP ɜː OE u OE spurnan gt to spurnOE y OE ċyriċe gt church OE byrthen gt burden OE hyrdel gt hurdleOE w r OE word gt word OE werc WS weorc gt work OE werold gt world OE wyrm gt worm OE wersa WS wiersa gt worse OE weorth gt worth o leng occ oː oo uː uː OE brȳd guma gt ME bride gome gt bride groom oo r uːr gt oːr gt GA ɔr RP ɔː OE duru gt door oo often th d t ʌ occ th d t ʊ OE wudu gt wood wʊd ooa often a ld mb ɔː oa oCV oː GA ou RP eu OE a OE ac gt oak OE hal gt whole oa oOE ld mb OE camb gt comb OE ald WS eald gt old OE haldan WS healdan gt to hold r oːr gt GA ɔr RP ɔː OE ar gt oar ore OE mara gt more OE bar gt boar OE sar gt soreǣ ea ɛː ea eCV eː iː OE ǣ OE hǣlan gt to heal hiːl OE hǣtu gt heat OE hwǣte gt wheatOE ea OE beatan gt to beat biːt OE leaf gt leaf OE ċeap gt cheap r iːr gt GA ɪr RP ɪe OE rǣran gt to rear OE eare gt ear OE sear gt sere OE searian gt to sear occ ei OE great gt great greit occ r eːr gt GA ɛr RP ɛe OE ǣr gt ere before often th d t ɛ OE ǣ OE brǣth odor gt breath OE swǣtan gt to sweat OE sprǣdan gt to spreadOE ea OE dead gt dead dɛd OE death death OE threat menace gt threat OE read gt red OE deaf gt deafe eo often e ld eː ee ie nd ld iː iː OE e OE fedan gt to feed OE grediġ WS grǣdiġ gt greedy OE me gt me OE fet gt feet OE ded WS dǣd gt deed OE nedl WS nǣdl gt needleOE eo OE deop deep OE feond gt fiend OE betweonum gt between OE beon gt to beOE ld OE feld gt field OE ġeldan WS ġieldan to pay gt to yield often r ɛːr ear erV eːr iːr gt GA ɪr RP ɪe OE e OE her gt here OE heran WS hieran gt to hear OE fer WS fǣr gt fearOE eo OE deore WS diere gt dear occ eːr gt GA ɛr RP ɛe OE ther WS thǣr gt there OE hwer WS hwǣr gt where occ r eːr eer iːr iːr gt GA ɪr RP ɪe OE beor gt beer OE deor gt deer OE steran WS stieran gt to steer OE ber WS bǣr gt bieri ȳ often i ld mb nd often y ld mb nd iː i iCV ei ai OE i OE ridan gt to ride OE tima gt time OE hwit gt white OE min gt mine of me OE ȳ OE mȳs gt mice OE brȳd gt bride OE hȳdan gt to hideOE ld mb nd OE findan gt to find OE ċild gt child OE climban gt to climb OE mynd gt mind r air gt GA air RP aie OE fȳr gt fire OE hȳrian gt to hire OE wir gt wireō occ eo oː oo u u OE ō OE mōna gt moon OE sōna gt soon OE fōd gt food fuːd OE dōn gt to doOE eo OE ċeosan gt to choose OE sċeotan gt to shoot r uːr gt oːr gt GA ɔr RP ɔː OE flōr gt floor OE mōr gt moor occ th d v ʌ OE blōd gt blood blʌd OE mōdor gt mother mʌde r OE glōf gt glove glʌv often th d t k ʊ OE gōd gt good gʊd OE bōc gt book bʊk OE lōcian gt to look lʊk OE fōt gt foot fʊt u often u nd uː ou eu au OE u OE mus gt mouse OE ut ute gt out OE hlud gt loudOE nd OE ġefunden gt found OE hund gt hound OE ġesund gt sound safe r aur gt GA aur RP aue OE OE ure gt our OE sċur gt shower OE sur gt sour occ t ʌ OE butan gt but OE strutian gt ME strouten gt to strutNote that the Modern English vowel usually spelled au British ɔː American ɔ does not appear in the above chart Its main source is late Middle English au which come from various sources Old English aw and ag claw lt clawu law lt lagu diphthongisation before h sought lt sōhte taught lt tahte daughter lt dohtor borrowings from Latin and French fawn lt Old French faune Paul lt Latin Paulus Other sources are Early Modern English lengthening of a before l salt all occasional shortening and later re lengthening of Middle English ɔː broad lt brɔːd lt brad and in American English lengthening of short o before unvoiced fricatives and voiced velars dog long off cross moth all with ɔ in American English at least in dialects that still maintain the difference between a and ɔ As mentioned above Modern English is derived from the Middle English of London which is derived largely from Anglian Old English with some admixture of West Saxon and Kentish One of the most noticeable differences among the dialects is the handling of original Old English y By the time of the written Old English documents the Old English of Kent had already unrounded y to e and the late Old English of Anglia unrounded y to i In the West Saxon area y remained as such well into Middle English times and was written u in Middle English documents from this area Some words with this sound were borrowed into London Middle English where the unfamiliar y was substituted with u Hence gild lt gyldan did lt dyde sin lt synn mind lt mynd dizzy lt dysiġ foolish lift lt lyft air etc show the normal Anglian development much lt myċel shows the West Saxon development merry lt myriġ shows the Kentish development build lt byldan and busy lt bysiġ have their spelling from West Saxon but pronunciation from Anglian bury ˈbɛri lt byrġan has its spelling from West Saxon but its pronunciation from Kentish Note that some apparent instances of modern e for Old English y are actually regular developments particularly where the y is a development of earlier West Saxon ie from i mutation of ea as the normal i mutation of ea in Anglian is e for example stern lt styrne lt starnijaz steel lt stȳle lt stahlija cf Old Saxon stehli Also some apparent instances of modern u for Old English y may actually be due to the influence of a related form with unmutated u e g sundry lt syndriġ influenced by sundor apart differently cf to sunder and asunder Notes Edit Campbell 1959 pp 50 51 Campbell 1959 p 108 Campbell 1959 p 53 sec 34 Campbell 1959 pp 52 53 sec 131 133 Minkova 2014 6 5 3 Diphthongs and Diphthongoids Campbell 1959 pp 54 60 Campbell 1959 pp 60 62 Cercignani 1983 van Gelderen E A History of the English Language John Benjamins 2014 p 100 Campbell 1959 pp 62 64 sec 164 168 Campbell 1959 pp 64 71 sec 170 189 Campbell 1959 Mitchell amp Robinson 2001 Lass 1994 a b Hogg 2011 23 Brunner takes the i of ie after palatalal consonant as purely diacritical Colman 1985 argues that ie which is the product of i umlaut represents iy iy Colman holds the same position as Brunner with regard to ie after a palatal consonant Campbell 1959 pp 143 144 sec 341 342 Campbell 1959 pp 144 4751 Mitchell amp Robinson 1992 p 25 sfn error no target CITEREFMitchellRobinson1992 help Campbell 1959 pp 146 147 sec 353 Campbell 1959 pp 85 93 sec 205 221 Campbell 1959 pp 93 98 sec 222 233 Campbell 1959 pp 186 187 sec 461 466 Campbell 1959 pp 104 105 sec 241 242 Campbell 1959 pp 98 104 sec 170 189 Campbell 1959 pp 155 156 sec 373 Prins 1972 p 69 Toon 1992 p 416References EditBaker Peter S 2007 Introduction to Old English 2nd ed Oxford Blackwell ISBN 978 1 4051 5272 3 Campbell A 1959 Old English Grammar Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 811943 7 Cercignani Fausto 1983 The Development of k and sk in Old English Journal of English and Germanic Philology 82 3 313 323 Hogg Richard M 1992 Chapter 3 Phonology and Morphology In Hogg Richard M ed The Cambridge History of the English Language Vol 1 The Beginnings to 1066 Cambridge University Press pp 67 168 doi 10 1017 CHOL9780521264747 ISBN 978 0 521 26474 7 Lass Roger 1994 Old English A historical linguistic companion Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 43087 9 Minkova Donka 2014 A Historical Phonology of English Edinburgh University Press Ltd ISBN 978 0 7486 3469 9 Mitchell Bruce Robinson Fred C 2001 A Guide to Old English 6th ed Oxford Blackwell ISBN 0 631 22636 2 Prins A A 1972 A History of English Phonemes Leiden Leiden University Press Toon Thomas E 1992 Chapter 6 Old English Dialects In Hogg Richard M ed The Cambridge History of the English Language Vol 1 The Beginnings to 1066 Cambridge University Press pp 67 168 doi 10 1017 CHOL9780521264747 ISBN 978 0 521 26474 7 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Phonological history of Old English amp oldid 1177129134, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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