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Sound change

A sound change, in historical linguistics, is a change in the pronunciation of a language. A sound change can involve the replacement of one speech sound (or, more generally, one phonetic feature value) by a different one (called phonetic change) or a more general change to the speech sounds that exist (phonological change), such as the merger of two sounds or the creation of a new sound. A sound change can eliminate the affected sound, or a new sound can be added. Sound changes can be environmentally conditioned if the change occurs in only some sound environments, and not others.

The term "sound change" refers to diachronic changes, which occur in a language's sound system. On the other hand, "alternation" refers to changes that happen synchronically (within the language of an individual speaker, depending on the neighbouring sounds) and do not change the language's underlying system (for example, the -s in the English plural can be pronounced differently depending on the preceding sound, as in bet[s], bed[z], which is a form of alternation, rather than sound change). Since "sound change" can refer to the historical introduction of an alternation (such as postvocalic /k/ in the Tuscan dialect, which was once [k] as in di [k]arlo 'of Carlo' but is now [h] di [h]arlo and alternates with [k] in other positions: con [k]arlo 'with Carlo'), that label is inherently imprecise and must often be clarified as referring to either phonemic change or restructuring.

Research on sound change is usually conducted under the working assumption that it is regular, which means that it is expected to apply mechanically whenever its structural conditions are met, irrespective of any non-phonological factors like the meaning of the words that are affected. Apparent exceptions to regular change can occur because of dialect borrowing, grammatical analogy, or other causes known and unknown, and some changes are described as "sporadic" and so they affect only one or a few particular words, without any apparent regularity.

The Neogrammarian linguists of the 19th century introduced the term sound law to refer to rules of regular change, perhaps in imitation of the laws of physics,[1] and the term "law" is still used in referring to specific sound rules that are named after their authors like Grimm's Law, Grassmann's Law etc. Real-world sound changes often admit exceptions, but the expectation of their regularity or absence of exceptions is of great heuristic value by allowing historical linguists to define the notion of regular correspondence by the comparative method.

Each sound change is limited in space and time and so it functions in a limited area (within certain dialects) and for a limited period of time. For those and other reasons, the term "sound law" has been criticized for implying a universality that is unrealistic for sound change.[2]

A sound change that affects the phonological system or the number or the distribution of its phonemes is a phonological change.

Principles

The following statements are used as heuristics in formulating sound changes as understood within the Neogrammarian model. However, for modern linguistics, they are not taken as inviolable rules but are seen as guidelines.

Sound change has no memory: sound change does not discriminate between the sources of a sound. If a previous sound change causes X,Y > Y (features X and Y merge as Y), a new one cannot affect only an original X.

Sound change ignores grammar: a sound change can have only phonological constraints, like X > Z in unstressed syllables. For example, it cannot only affect adjectives. The only exception to this is that a sound change may or may not recognise word boundaries, even when they are not indicated by prosodic clues. Also, sound changes may be regularized in inflectional paradigms (such as verbal inflection), in which case the change is no longer phonological but morphological in nature.[3]

Sound change is exceptionless: if a sound change can happen at a place, it will. It affects all sounds that meet the criteria for change. Apparent exceptions are possible, because of analogy and other regularization processes, another sound change, or an unrecognized conditioning factor. That is the traditional view expressed by the Neogrammarians. In past decades, however, it has been shown that sound change does not necessarily affect all possible words.[citation needed] However, when a sound change is initiated, it often eventually expands to the whole lexicon. For example, the Spanish fronting of the Vulgar Latin [g] (voiced velar stop) before [i e ɛ] seems to have reached every possible word. By contrast, the voicing of word-initial Latin [k] to [g] occurred in colaphus > golpe and cattus > gato but not in canna > caña. See also lexical diffusion.

Sound change is inevitable: All languages vary from place to place and time to time, and neither writing nor media prevents that change.

Formal notation

A statement of the form

A > B

is to be read, "Sound A changes into (or is replaced by, is reflected as, etc) sound B". Therefore, A belongs to an older stage of the language in question, and B belongs to a more recent stage. The symbol ">" can be reversed, B < A, which also means that the (more recent) B derives from the (older) A":

POc. *t > Rot. f
means that "Proto-Oceanic (POc.) *t is reflected as [f] in the Rotuman (Rot.)".

The two sides of such a statement indicate only the start and the end of the change, but additional intermediate stages may have occurred. The example above is actually a compressed account of a sequence of changes: *[t] first changed to [θ] (like the initial consonant of English thin), which has since yielded [f] and can be represented more fully:

t > θ > f

Unless a change operates unconditionally (in all environments), the context in which it applies must be specified:

A > B /X__Y
= "A changes to B when it is preceded by X and followed by Y."

For example:

It. b > v /[vowel]__[vowel], which can be simplified to just
It. b > v /V__V (in which the V stands for any vowel)
= "Intervocalic [b] (inherited from Latin) became [v] in Italian" (such as in caballum, dēbet > cavallo 'horse', deve 'owe (3rd pers. sing.)'

Here is a second example:

PIr. [−cont][−voi] > [+cont]/__[C][+cont]
= "A preconsonantal voiceless non-continuant (voiceless stop) changed into corresponding a voiceless continuant (fricative) in Proto-Iranian (PIr.)" when it was immediately followed by a continuant consonant (a resonant or a fricative): Proto-Indo-Iranian *pra 'forth' > Avestan fra; *trayas "three" (masc. nom. pl.)> Av. θrayō; *čatwāras "four" (masc. nom. pl.) > Av. čaθwārō; *pśaws "of a cow" (nom. *paśu) > Av. fšāoš (nom. pasu). Note that the fricativization did not occur before stops and so *sapta "seven" > Av. hapta. (However, in the variety of Iranian that led to Old Persian, fricativization occurred in all clusters: Old Persian hafta "seven".)

The symbol "#" stands for a word boundary (initial or final) and so the notation "/__#" means "word-finally", and "/#__" means "word-initially":

Gk. [stop] > ∅ /__#
= "Word-final stops were deleted in Greek (Gk.)".

That can be simplified to

Gk. P > ∅ / __#

in which P stands for any plosive.

Terms for changes in pronunciation

In historical linguistics, a number of traditional terms designate types of phonetic change, either by nature or result. A number of such types are often (or usually) sporadic, that is, more or less accidents that happen to a specific form. Others affect a whole phonological system. Sound changes that affect a whole phonological system are also classified according to how they affect the overall shape of the system; see phonological change.

  • Assimilation: One sound becomes more like another, or (much more rarely) two sounds become more like each other. Example: in Latin the prefix *kom- becomes con- before an apical stop ([t d]) or [n]: contactus "touched", condere "to found, establish", connūbium "legal marriage". The great majority of assimilations take place between contiguous segments,[citation needed] and the great majority involve the earlier sound becoming more like the later one (e.g. in connūbium, m- + n becomes -nn- rather than -mm-). Assimilation between contiguous segments are (diachronically speaking) exceptionless sound laws rather than sporadic, isolated changes.[citation needed]
  • Dissimilation: The opposite of assimilation. One sound becomes less like another, or (much more rarely) two sounds become less like each other. Examples: Classical Latin quīnque /kʷiːnkʷe/ "five" > Vulgar Latin *kinkʷe (whence French cinq, Italian cinque, etc.); Old Spanish omne "man" > Spanish hombre. The great majority of dissimilations involve segments that are not contiguous, but, as with assimilations, the great majority involve an earlier sound changing with reference to a later one. Dissimilation is usually a sporadic phenomenon, but Grassmann's Law (in Sanskrit and Greek) exemplifies a systematic dissimilation. If the change of a sequence of fricatives such that one becomes a stop is dissimilation, then such changes as Proto-Germanic *hs to /ks/ (spelled x) in English would count as a regular sound law: PGmc. *sehs "six" > Old English siex, etc.
  • Metathesis: Two sounds switch places. Example: Old English thridda became Middle English third. Most such changes are sporadic, but occasionally a sound law is involved, as Romance *tl > Spanish ld, thus *kapitlu, *titlu "chapter (of a cathedral)", "tittle" > Spanish cabildo, tilde. Metathesis can take place between non-contiguous segments, as Greek amélgō "I milk" > Modern Greek armégō.
  • Lenition, softening of a consonant, e.g. stop consonant to affricate or fricative; and its antonym fortition, hardening of a consonant.
  • Tonogenesis: Syllables come to have distinctive pitch contours.
  • Sandhi: conditioned changes that take place at word-boundaries but not elsewhere. It can be morpheme-specific, as in the loss of the vowel in the enclitic forms of English is /ɪz/, with subsequent change of /z/ to /s/ adjacent to a voiceless consonant Frank's not here /ˈfræŋksnɒtˈhɪər/. Or a small class of elements, such as the assimilation of the /ð/ of English the, this and that to a preceding /n/ (including the /n/ of and when the /d/ is elided) or /l/: all the often /ɔːllə/, in the often /ɪnnə/, and so on. As in these examples, such features are rarely indicated in standard orthography. In a striking exception, Sanskrit orthography reflects a wide variety of such features; thus, tat "that" is written tat, tac, taj, tad, or tan depending on what the first sound of the next word is. These are all assimilations, but medial sequences do not assimilate the same way.
  • Haplology: The loss of a syllable when an adjacent syllable is similar or (rarely) identical. Example: Old English Englaland became Modern English England, or the common pronunciation of probably as [ˈprɒbli]. This change usually affects commonly used words. The word haplology itself is sometimes jokingly pronounced "haplogy".
  • Elision, aphaeresis, syncope, and apocope: all losses of sounds. Elision is the loss of unstressed sounds, aphaeresis the loss of initial sounds, syncope is the loss of medial sounds, and apocope is the loss of final sounds.
    • Elision examples: in the southeastern United States, unstressed schwas tend to drop, so "American" is not /əˈmɛɹəkən/ but /ˈmɚkən/. Standard English is possum < opossum.
    • Syncope examples: the Old French word for "state" is estat, but the s disappeared, yielding état. Similarly, the loss of /t/ in English soften, hasten, castle, etc.
    • Apocope examples: the final -e [ə] in Middle English words was pronounced, but is only retained in spelling as a silent E. In English /b/ and /ɡ/ were apocopated in final position after nasals: lamb, long /læm/, /lɒŋ ~ lɔːŋ/.
  • Epenthesis (also known as anaptyxis): The introduction of a sound between two adjacent sounds. Examples: Latin humilis > English humble; in Slavic an -l- intrudes between a labial and a following yod, as *zemya "land" > Russian zemlya (земля). Most commonly, epenthesis is in the nature of a "transitional" consonant, but vowels may be epenthetic: non-standard English film in two syllables, athlete in three. Epenthesis can be regular, as when the Indo-European "tool" suffix *-tlom everywhere becomes Latin -culum (so speculum "mirror" < *speḱtlom, pōculum "drinking cup" < *poH3-tlom). Some scholars reserve the term epenthesis for "intrusive" vowels and use excrescence for intrusive consonants.
  • Prothesis: The addition of a sound at the beginning of a word. Example: word-initial /s/ + stop clusters in Latin gained a preceding /e/ in Old Spanish and Old French; hence, the Spanish word for "state" is estado, deriving from Latin status.
  • Nasalization: Vowels followed by nasal consonants can become nasalized. If the nasal consonant is lost but the vowel retains its nasalized pronunciation, nasalization becomes phonemic, that is, distinctive. Example: French "-in" words used to be pronounced [in], but are now pronounced [ɛ̃], and the [n] is no longer pronounced (except in cases of liaison).

Examples of specific sound changes in various languages

Notes

  1. ^ Sihler, p. 50
  2. ^ "The French phoneticians and the Fino-Ugric linguists" are examples according to Anttila, p. 85.
  3. ^ See Hill, Nathan W. (2014) 'Grammatically conditioned sound change.' Language and Linguistics Compass, 8 (6). pp. 211-229.

References

  • Anttila, Raimo (1989). Historical and Comparative Linguistics. John Benjamins.
  • Campbell, Lyle (2004). Historical Linguistics: An Introduction. The MIT Press.
  • Hale, Mark (2007). Historical Linguistics: Theory and Method. Oxford, Blackwell
  • Hock, Hans Henrich (1991). Principles of Historical Linguistics. Mouton De Gruyter.
  • McDorman, Richard E. (1999). Labial Instability in Sound Change. Organizational Knowledge Press.
  • Morley, Rebecca (2019). Sound Structure and Sound Change: A Modeling Approach. Berlin: Language Science Press. ISBN 978-3-96110-191-7. doi:10.5281/zenodo.3264909. Open Access. http://langsci-press.org/catalog/book/251
  • Sihler, Andrew L. (2000). Language History: An Introduction. John Benjamins.

sound, change, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, . This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Sound change news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may be too technical for most readers to understand Please help improve it to make it understandable to non experts without removing the technical details March 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message 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 A sound change in historical linguistics is a change in the pronunciation of a language A sound change can involve the replacement of one speech sound or more generally one phonetic feature value by a different one called phonetic change or a more general change to the speech sounds that exist phonological change such as the merger of two sounds or the creation of a new sound A sound change can eliminate the affected sound or a new sound can be added Sound changes can be environmentally conditioned if the change occurs in only some sound environments and not others The term sound change refers to diachronic changes which occur in a language s sound system On the other hand alternation refers to changes that happen synchronically within the language of an individual speaker depending on the neighbouring sounds and do not change the language s underlying system for example the s in the English plural can be pronounced differently depending on the preceding sound as in bet s bed z which is a form of alternation rather than sound change Since sound change can refer to the historical introduction of an alternation such as postvocalic k in the Tuscan dialect which was once k as in di k arlo of Carlo but is now h di h arlo and alternates with k in other positions con k arlo with Carlo that label is inherently imprecise and must often be clarified as referring to either phonemic change or restructuring Research on sound change is usually conducted under the working assumption that it is regular which means that it is expected to apply mechanically whenever its structural conditions are met irrespective of any non phonological factors like the meaning of the words that are affected Apparent exceptions to regular change can occur because of dialect borrowing grammatical analogy or other causes known and unknown and some changes are described as sporadic and so they affect only one or a few particular words without any apparent regularity The Neogrammarian linguists of the 19th century introduced the term sound law to refer to rules of regular change perhaps in imitation of the laws of physics 1 and the term law is still used in referring to specific sound rules that are named after their authors like Grimm s Law Grassmann s Law etc Real world sound changes often admit exceptions but the expectation of their regularity or absence of exceptions is of great heuristic value by allowing historical linguists to define the notion of regular correspondence by the comparative method Each sound change is limited in space and time and so it functions in a limited area within certain dialects and for a limited period of time For those and other reasons the term sound law has been criticized for implying a universality that is unrealistic for sound change 2 A sound change that affects the phonological system or the number or the distribution of its phonemes is a phonological change Contents 1 Principles 2 Formal notation 3 Terms for changes in pronunciation 4 Examples of specific sound changes in various languages 5 Notes 6 ReferencesPrinciples EditThe following statements are used as heuristics in formulating sound changes as understood within the Neogrammarian model However for modern linguistics they are not taken as inviolable rules but are seen as guidelines Sound change has no memory sound change does not discriminate between the sources of a sound If a previous sound change causes X Y gt Y features X and Y merge as Y a new one cannot affect only an original X Sound change ignores grammar a sound change can have only phonological constraints like X gt Z in unstressed syllables For example it cannot only affect adjectives The only exception to this is that a sound change may or may not recognise word boundaries even when they are not indicated by prosodic clues Also sound changes may be regularized in inflectional paradigms such as verbal inflection in which case the change is no longer phonological but morphological in nature 3 Sound change is exceptionless if a sound change can happen at a place it will It affects all sounds that meet the criteria for change Apparent exceptions are possible because of analogy and other regularization processes another sound change or an unrecognized conditioning factor That is the traditional view expressed by the Neogrammarians In past decades however it has been shown that sound change does not necessarily affect all possible words citation needed However when a sound change is initiated it often eventually expands to the whole lexicon For example the Spanish fronting of the Vulgar Latin g voiced velar stop before i e ɛ seems to have reached every possible word By contrast the voicing of word initial Latin k to g occurred in colaphus gt golpe and cattus gt gato but not in canna gt cana See also lexical diffusion Sound change is inevitable All languages vary from place to place and time to time and neither writing nor media prevents that change Formal notation EditSee also Phonological rule A statement of the form A gt B dd is to be read Sound A changes into or is replaced by is reflected as etc sound B Therefore A belongs to an older stage of the language in question and B belongs to a more recent stage The symbol gt can be reversed B lt A which also means that the more recent B derives from the older A POc t gt Rot f dd means that Proto Oceanic POc t is reflected as f in the Rotuman Rot The two sides of such a statement indicate only the start and the end of the change but additional intermediate stages may have occurred The example above is actually a compressed account of a sequence of changes t first changed to 8 like the initial consonant of English thin which has since yielded f and can be represented more fully t gt 8 gt f dd Unless a change operates unconditionally in all environments the context in which it applies must be specified A gt B X Y dd A changes to B when it is preceded by X and followed by Y For example It b gt v vowel vowel which can be simplified to just It b gt v V V in which the V stands for any vowel dd Intervocalic b inherited from Latin became v in Italian such as in caballum debet gt cavallo horse deve owe 3rd pers sing Here is a second example PIr cont voi gt cont C cont dd A preconsonantal voiceless non continuant voiceless stop changed into corresponding a voiceless continuant fricative in Proto Iranian PIr when it was immediately followed by a continuant consonant a resonant or a fricative Proto Indo Iranian pra forth gt Avestan fra trayas three masc nom pl gt Av 8rayō catwaras four masc nom pl gt Av ca8warō psaws of a cow nom pasu gt Av fsaos nom pasu Note that the fricativization did not occur before stops and so sapta seven gt Av hapta However in the variety of Iranian that led to Old Persian fricativization occurred in all clusters Old Persian hafta seven The symbol stands for a word boundary initial or final and so the notation means word finally and means word initially Gk stop gt dd Word final stops were deleted in Greek Gk That can be simplified to Gk P gt dd in which P stands for any plosive Terms for changes in pronunciation EditIn historical linguistics a number of traditional terms designate types of phonetic change either by nature or result A number of such types are often or usually sporadic that is more or less accidents that happen to a specific form Others affect a whole phonological system Sound changes that affect a whole phonological system are also classified according to how they affect the overall shape of the system see phonological change Assimilation One sound becomes more like another or much more rarely two sounds become more like each other Example in Latin the prefix kom becomes con before an apical stop t d or n contactus touched condere to found establish connubium legal marriage The great majority of assimilations take place between contiguous segments citation needed and the great majority involve the earlier sound becoming more like the later one e g in connubium m n becomes nn rather than mm Assimilation between contiguous segments are diachronically speaking exceptionless sound laws rather than sporadic isolated changes citation needed Dissimilation The opposite of assimilation One sound becomes less like another or much more rarely two sounds become less like each other Examples Classical Latin quinque kʷiːnkʷe five gt Vulgar Latin kinkʷe whence French cinq Italian cinque etc Old Spanish omne man gt Spanish hombre The great majority of dissimilations involve segments that are not contiguous but as with assimilations the great majority involve an earlier sound changing with reference to a later one Dissimilation is usually a sporadic phenomenon but Grassmann s Law in Sanskrit and Greek exemplifies a systematic dissimilation If the change of a sequence of fricatives such that one becomes a stop is dissimilation then such changes as Proto Germanic hs to ks spelled x in English would count as a regular sound law PGmc sehs six gt Old English siex etc Metathesis Two sounds switch places Example Old English thridda became Middle English third Most such changes are sporadic but occasionally a sound law is involved as Romance tl gt Spanish ld thus kapitlu titlu chapter of a cathedral tittle gt Spanish cabildo tilde Metathesis can take place between non contiguous segments as Greek amelgō I milk gt Modern Greek armegō Lenition softening of a consonant e g stop consonant to affricate or fricative and its antonym fortition hardening of a consonant Tonogenesis Syllables come to have distinctive pitch contours Sandhi conditioned changes that take place at word boundaries but not elsewhere It can be morpheme specific as in the loss of the vowel in the enclitic forms of English is ɪz with subsequent change of z to s adjacent to a voiceless consonant Frank s not here ˈfraeŋksnɒtˈhɪer Or a small class of elements such as the assimilation of the d of English the this and that to a preceding n including the n of and when the d is elided or l all the often ɔːlle in the often ɪnne and so on As in these examples such features are rarely indicated in standard orthography In a striking exception Sanskrit orthography reflects a wide variety of such features thus tat that is written tat tac taj tad or tan depending on what the first sound of the next word is These are all assimilations but medial sequences do not assimilate the same way Haplology The loss of a syllable when an adjacent syllable is similar or rarely identical Example Old English Englaland became Modern English England or the common pronunciation of probably as ˈprɒbli This change usually affects commonly used words The word haplology itself is sometimes jokingly pronounced haplogy Elision aphaeresis syncope and apocope all losses of sounds Elision is the loss of unstressed sounds aphaeresis the loss of initial sounds syncope is the loss of medial sounds and apocope is the loss of final sounds Elision examples in the southeastern United States unstressed schwas tend to drop so American is not eˈmɛɹeken but ˈmɚken Standard English is possum lt opossum Syncope examples the Old French word for state is estat but the s disappeared yielding etat Similarly the loss of t in English soften hasten castle etc Apocope examples the final e e in Middle English words was pronounced but is only retained in spelling as a silent E In English b and ɡ were apocopated in final position after nasals lamb long laem lɒŋ lɔːŋ Epenthesis also known as anaptyxis The introduction of a sound between two adjacent sounds Examples Latin humilis gt English humble in Slavic an l intrudes between a labial and a following yod as zemya land gt Russian zemlya zemlya Most commonly epenthesis is in the nature of a transitional consonant but vowels may be epenthetic non standard English film in two syllables athlete in three Epenthesis can be regular as when the Indo European tool suffix tlom everywhere becomes Latin culum so speculum mirror lt speḱtlom pōculum drinking cup lt poH3 tlom Some scholars reserve the term epenthesis for intrusive vowels and use excrescence for intrusive consonants Prothesis The addition of a sound at the beginning of a word Example word initial s stop clusters in Latin gained a preceding e in Old Spanish and Old French hence the Spanish word for state is estado deriving from Latin status Nasalization Vowels followed by nasal consonants can become nasalized If the nasal consonant is lost but the vowel retains its nasalized pronunciation nasalization becomes phonemic that is distinctive Example French in words used to be pronounced in but are now pronounced ɛ and the n is no longer pronounced except in cases of liaison Examples of specific sound changes in various languages EditAnglo Frisian nasal spirant law Canaanite shift Cot caught merger Dahl s law Grassmann s law Great Vowel Shift English Grimm s law High German consonant shift Kluge s law Phonetic change f h in Spanish Ruki sound law Slavic palatalization Sound change in Japanese Umlaut Verner s lawNotes Edit Sihler p 50 The French phoneticians and the Fino Ugric linguists are examples according to Anttila p 85 See Hill Nathan W 2014 Grammatically conditioned sound change Language and Linguistics Compass 8 6 pp 211 229 References EditAnttila Raimo 1989 Historical and Comparative Linguistics John Benjamins Campbell Lyle 2004 Historical Linguistics An Introduction The MIT Press Hale Mark 2007 Historical Linguistics Theory and Method Oxford Blackwell Hock Hans Henrich 1991 Principles of Historical Linguistics Mouton De Gruyter McDorman Richard E 1999 Labial Instability in Sound Change Organizational Knowledge Press Morley Rebecca 2019 Sound Structure and Sound Change A Modeling Approach Berlin Language Science Press ISBN 978 3 96110 191 7 doi 10 5281 zenodo 3264909 Open Access http langsci press org catalog book 251 Sihler Andrew L 2000 Language History An Introduction John Benjamins Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sound change amp oldid 1118570648, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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