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History and description of |
English pronunciation |
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Historical stages |
General development |
Development of vowels |
Development of consonants |
Variable features |
Related topics |
Like many other languages, English has wide variation in pronunciation, both historically and from dialect to dialect. In general, however, the regional dialects of English share a largely similar (but not identical) phonological system. Among other things, most dialects have vowel reduction in unstressed syllables and a complex set of phonological features that distinguish fortis and lenis consonants (stops, affricates, and fricatives).
This article describes the development of the phonology of English over time, starting from its roots in proto-Germanic to diverse changes in different dialects of modern English.
In the following description, abbreviations are used as follows:
This section summarizes the changes occurring within distinct time periods, covering the last 2,000 years or so. Within each subsection, changes are in approximate chronological order.
The time periods for some of the early stages are quite short due to the extensive population movements occurring during the Migration Period (early AD), which resulted in rapid dialect fragmentation.
This period includes changes in late Proto-Germanic, up to about the 1st century. Only a general overview of the more important changes is given here; for a full list, see the Proto-Germanic article.
This was the period after the East Germanic languages had split off. Changes during this time were shared with the North Germanic dialects, i.e. Proto-Norse. Many of the changes that occurred were areal, and took time to propagate throughout a dialect continuum that was already diversifying. Thus, the ordering of the changes is sometimes ambiguous, and can differ between dialects.
This period occurred around the 2nd to 4th centuries. It is unclear if there was ever a distinct "Proto-West Germanic", as most changes in this period were areal, and likely spread throughout a dialect continuum that was already diversifying further. Thus, this "period" may not have been a real timespan, but may simply cover certain areal changes that did not reach into North Germanic. This period ends with the further diversification of West Germanic into several groups before and during the Migration Period: Ingvaeonic, Istvaeonic (Old Frankish) and Irminonic (Upper German).
This period is estimated to have lasted only a century or so, the 4th to 5th; the time during which the Franks started to spread south into Gaul (France) and the various coastal people began colonising Britain. Changes in this period affected the Ingvaeonic languages, but not the more southerly Central and Upper German languages. The Ingvaeonic group was probably never homogeneous, but was divided further into Old Saxon and Anglo-Frisian. Old Frankish (and later Old Dutch) was not in the core group, but was affected by the spread of several areal changes from the Ingvaeonic area.
The Anglo-Frisian languages shared several unique changes that were not found in the other West Germanic languages. The migration to Britain caused a further split into early Old English and early Old Frisian.
This period is estimated to be c. AD 475–900. This includes changes from the split between Old English and Old Frisian (c. AD 475) up through historic early West Saxon of AD 900:
This period is estimated to be c. 900–1400.
This period is estimated to be c. AD 1400–1600.
This period is estimated to be c. AD 1600–1725.[ citation needed ]
This period is estimated to be c. AD 1725–1945.
Some of these changes are in progress.
The following table shows a possible sequence of changes for some basic vocabulary items, leading from Proto-Indo-European (PIE) to Modern English. The notation ">!" indicates an unexpected change, whereas the simple notation ">" indicates an expected change. An empty cell means no change at the given stage for the given item. Only sound changes that had an effect on one or more of the vocabulary items are shown.
one | two | three | four | five | six | seven | mother | heart | hear | foot | feet | |
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Proto-Indo-European | óynos | dwóh₁ | tríh₂ (fem.) | kʷetwṓr | pénkʷe | séḱs | septḿ̥ | méh₂tēr | ḱḗr | h₂ḱowsyónom | pṓds | pódes |
Centumization | séks | kḗr | h₂kowsyónom | |||||||||
Pre-Germanic unexpected changes (perhaps P-Celtic or P-Italic influences) | >! dwóy | >! tríh₂s | >! petwṓr | >! pémpe | >! sepḿ̥d | >! meh₂tḗr | >! kérdō | pṓdes | ||||
Sonorant epenthesis | sepúmd | |||||||||||
Final overlong vowels | kérdô | |||||||||||
Laryngeal loss | trī́s | mātḗr | kowsyónom | |||||||||
Loss of final nonhigh vowels | pemp | |||||||||||
Grimm's Law | twoi | þrī́s | feþwṓr | fémf | sehs | sefúmt | māþḗr | hértô | housjónom | fṓts | fṓtes | |
Verner's Law | oinoz | þrīz | feðwōr | seβumt | māðēr | houzjonom | fōtez | |||||
Unstressed syllables: owo>ō,ew>ow,e>i,ji>i | fōtiz | |||||||||||
o > a, ō > ā, ô > â | ainaz | twai | feðwār | hertâ | hauzjanam | fāts | fātiz | |||||
Final -m > -n | hauzjanan | |||||||||||
m > n before dental | seβunt | |||||||||||
Final -n > nasalization | hauzjaną | |||||||||||
Loss of final -t | seβun | |||||||||||
Sievers' Law | hauzijaną | |||||||||||
Nasal raising | fimf | |||||||||||
ā > ō, â > ô | feðwōr | mōðēr | hertô | fōts | fōtiz | |||||||
Proto-Germanic form | *ainaz | *twai | *þrīz | *feðwōr | *fimf | *sehs | *seβun | *mōðēr | *hertô | *hauzijaną | *fōts | *fōtiz |
Final vowel shortening/loss | *ainz? | *þrīz | *feðwur | *mōðar | *hertō | *hauzijan | ||||||
Final -z loss | *ain | *þrī | *fōti | |||||||||
Rhotacism: z > r | haurijan | |||||||||||
Intervocalic ðw > ww | *fewwur | |||||||||||
Hardening: ð > d, β > v, f [ɸ] > [f] | *finf | *sevun | *mōdar | |||||||||
Morphological changes | >! *þriju | >! *herta | > *fōt | |||||||||
West Germanic pre-form | ain | twai | þriju | fewwur | finf | sehs | sevun | mōdar | herta | haurijan | fōt | fōti |
Ingvaeonic (prespirant) nasal loss | fīf | |||||||||||
ai > ā | ān | twā | ||||||||||
Anglo-Frisian brightening | hertæ | hæurijan | ||||||||||
I-mutation | heyrijan | fēti | ||||||||||
Loss of medial -ij- | heyran | |||||||||||
Breaking | hĕŭrtæ | |||||||||||
Diphthong height harmony | feowur | hĕŏrtæ | hēran, hiyran | |||||||||
Back mutation | sĕŏvun | |||||||||||
Final reduction | feowor | sĕŏvon | >! mōdor | hĕŏrte | fēt | |||||||
Raising: ehs eht > ihs iht | sihs | |||||||||||
hs > ks | siks | |||||||||||
Late OE lowering: iu > eo | þreo | |||||||||||
iy > ȳ | hȳran | |||||||||||
Late Old English spelling | ān | twā | þrēo | fēowor | fīf | six | seofon | mōdor | heorte | hēran, hȳran | fōt | fēt |
Middle English (ME) smoothing | θrøː | føːwor | søvon | hørte | ||||||||
ME final reduction | føːwər | søvən | moːdər | hørtə | heːrən | |||||||
ME /aːæː/>/ɔːɛː/ | ɔːn | twɔː | ||||||||||
/-dər/ > /-ðər/ | moːðər | |||||||||||
ME unexpected (?) vowel changes | >! fiːv-ə | >! hɛːrən | ||||||||||
ME diphthong changes | >! fowər | |||||||||||
Late ME unrounding | θreː | sevən | hertə | |||||||||
Late Middle English spelling (c. 1350) | oon | two | three | fower | five | six | seven | mother | herte | heere(n) | foot | feet |
Late ME final reduction (late 1300s) | >! fowr | fiːv | hert | hɛːr | ||||||||
Late ME /er/>/ar/ (1400s) [40] | hart | |||||||||||
Late ME Great Vowel Shift (c. 1400-1550) | oːn >! wʊn | twoː | θriː | fəiv | muːðər | heːr | fuːt | fiːt | ||||
Early Modern English (EModE) smoothing | foːr | |||||||||||
EModE raising /woː/>/wuː/>/uː/ [41] | tuː | |||||||||||
EModE shortening | mʊðər | |||||||||||
EModE /ʊ/>/ɤ/>/ʌ/ | wʌn | mʌðər | ||||||||||
EModE shortening | fʊt | |||||||||||
Later vowel shifts | fɔːr | faiv | sɪks | hɑrt | hiːr | |||||||
Loss of -r (regional) | fɔː | mʌðə | hɑːt | hiə | ||||||||
Modern pronunciation | wʌn | tuː | θriː | fɔː(r) | faɪv | sɪks | sevən | mʌðə(r) | hɑrt/hɑːt | hiːr/hɪː | fʊt | fiːt |
one | two | three | four | five | six | seven | mother | heart | hear | foot | feet | |
NOTE: Some of the changes listed above as "unexpected" are more predictable than others. For example:
This table describes the main historical developments of English vowels in the last 1000 years, beginning with late Old English and focusing on the Middle English and Modern English changes leading to the current forms. It provides a lot of detail about the changes taking place in the last 600 years (since Middle English), while omitting any detail in the Old English and earlier periods. For more detail about the changes in the first millennium AD, see the section on the development of Old English vowels.
This table omits the history of Middle English diphthongs; see that link for a table summarizing the developments.
The table is organized around the pronunciation of Late Middle English c. 1400 AD (the time of Chaucer) and the modern spelling system, which dates from the same time and closely approximates the pronunciation of the time. Modern English spelling originates in the spelling conventions of Middle English scribes and its modern form was largely determined by William Caxton, the first English printer (beginning in 1476).
As an example, the vowel spelled ⟨a⟩ corresponds to two Middle English pronunciations: /a/ in most circumstances, but long /aː/ in an open syllable, i.e. followed by a single consonant and then a vowel, notated aCV in the spelling column. (This discussion ignores the effect of trisyllabic laxing.) The lengthened variant is due to the Early Middle English process of open-syllable lengthening; this is indicated by (leng.). Prior to that time, both vowels were pronounced the same, as a short vowel /a/; this is reflected by the fact that there is a single merged field corresponding to both Middle English sounds in the Late Old English column (the first column). However, this earlier Middle English vowel /a/ is itself the merger of a number of different Anglian Old English sounds:
Moving forward in time, the two Middle English vowels /a/ and /aː/ correspond directly to the two vowels /a/ and /ɛː/, respectively, in the Early Modern English of c. 1600 AD (the time of Shakespeare). However, each vowel has split into a number of different pronunciations in Modern English, depending on the phonological context. The short /a/, for example, has split into seven different vowels, all still spelled ⟨a⟩ but pronounced differently:
NOTE: In this table, abbreviations are used as follows:
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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 |
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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) |
OE æ | OE fæþmembrace > 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 wanndark > 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/ > /eɪ/ | 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/ˈbɛri/; 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) | |||||
(occ.)/eɪ/ | OE brecan > to break/breɪk/ | |||||
(occ. +r)/eːr/ > GA /ɛr/, RP /ɛə/ | OE beoran (WS beran) > to bear; OE pere, peru > pear; OE swerian > to swear; OE werman > were- | |||||
(often +th,d,t,v)/ɛ/ | OE leþer > leather/lɛðɚ/; OE stede > stead; OE weder > weather; OE heofon > heaven; OE hefiġ > heavy | |||||
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/ˈbɪzi/ | |||||
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 | ||
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 /oʊ/, RP /əʊ/ | 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 | |||||
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 | |||||
(leng. — occ.)/oː/ | oo | /uː/ | /uː/ | OE (brȳd)-guma > ME (bride)-gome >! (bride)-groom | ||
(+r)/uːr/ > /oːr/ > GA /ɔr/, RP /ɔː/ | OE duru > door | |||||
(often +th,d,t)/ʌ/ | ? | |||||
(occ. +th,d,t)/ʊ/ | OE wudu > wood/wʊd/ | |||||
ā; often a+ld,mb | /ɔː/ | oa,oCV | /oː/ | GA /oʊ/, RP /əʊ/ | OE ā | OE āc > oak; OE hāl > whole |
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.)/eɪ/ | OE grēat > great/greɪt/ | |||||
(occ. +r)/eːr/ > GA /ɛr/, RP /ɛə/ | OE ǣr > ere (before) | |||||
(often +th,d,t)/ɛ/ | OE ǣ | OE brǣþodor > breath; OE swǣtan > to sweat; OE sprǣdan > to spread | ||||
OE ēa | OE dēad > dead/dɛd/; OE dēaþdeath; OE þrēatmenace > 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 mē > me; OE fēt > feet; OE dēd (WS dǣd) > deed; OE nēdl (WS nǣdl) > needle |
OE ēo | OE dēopdeep; 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/ | /aɪ/ | 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 /aɪr/, RP /aɪə/ | OE fȳr > fire; OE hȳrian > to hire; OE wīr > wire | |||||
ō; occ. ēo | /oː/ | oo | /uː/ | /uː/ | 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/ | /aʊ/ | 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 /aʊr/, RP /aʊə/ | OE | OE ūre > our; OE sċūr > shower; OE sūr > sour | ||||
(occ. +t)/ʌ/ | OE būtan > but; OE strūtian > ME strouten > to strut |
This table describes the main developments of Middle English diphthongs, starting with the Old English sound sequences that produced them (sequences of vowels and g, h or ƿ) and ending with their Modern English equivalents. Many special cases have been ignored.
Note: V means "any vowel"; C means "any consonant"; # means "end of word".
Late Old English (Anglian) | Early Middle English | Late Middle English | Early Modern English | Modern English | Example (Old and Modern English forms given) [42] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
æġ, ǣġ | /ai/ | /ai/[æi] | /eː/ | /eɪ/ | dæġ > day; mæġ > may; mæġden > maiden; næġl > nail; fæġer > fair; clǣġ > clay; grǣġ > gray |
eġ, ēġ# | /ɛi/ | weġ > way; pleġan > to play; reġn > rain; leġer > lair; leġde > laid; hēġ (WS hīeġ) > hay | |||
ēġV | /ei/ > /iː/ | /iː/ | /əi/ | /aɪ/ | ēage > ēġe > eye; lēogan > lēġan > to lie (deceive); flēoge > flēġe > fly |
iġ, īġ, yġ, ȳġ | /iː/ | tiġel > tile; liġe > (I) lie ("recline"); hīġian > to hie; ryġe > rye; byġe > (I) buy; drȳġe > dry | |||
æw, aw, agV | /au/ | /au/ | /ɔː/ | /ɔː/ | clawu > claw; lagu > law; dragan > to draw |
ǣw, ēaw, ew, eow | /ɛu/ | /ɛu/ | /juː/ | /(j)uː/ | mǣw > mew; lǣwede > lewd; scrēawa > shrew; dēaw > dew |
ēw, ēow | /eu/ | /iu/ | ċēowan > to chew; hrēowan > to rue; blēow > blew; trēowþ > truth | ||
iw, īw, yw, ȳw | /iu/ | hīw > hue; nīwe > new; trīewe (WS) > true; Tīwesdæġ > Tiwesdæġ > Tuesday | |||
āw, āgV, ow, ogV, ōw, ōgV | /ɔu/ | /ɔu/ | /ou/ > /oː/ | /əʊ/ (British), /oʊ/ (American) | cnāwan > to know; crāwa > crow; snāw > snow; sāwol > soul; āgan > to owe; āgen > own; grōwan > to grow; blōwen > blown; boga > bow/bou/; flogen > flown |
ugV, ūgV | /uː/ | /uː/ | /əu/ | /aʊ/ | fugol > fowl; drugaþ > drouth > drought; būgan > to bow/baʊ/ |
æh, ah, ag# | /auh/ | /auh/ | ([x] > ∅)/ɔː/ | /ɔː/ | slæht (WS sleaht) + -or > slaughter |
([x] > /f/)/af/ | /æf/,/ɑːf/ | hlæhtor > laughter | |||
eh | /ɛih/ | /ɛih/ | /ei/ > /eː/ | /eɪ/ | streht > straight |
ēh | /eih/ > /iːh/ | /iːh/ | /əi/ | /aɪ/ | hēah > hēh > high; þēoh > þēh > thigh; nēh > nigh |
ih, īh, yh, ȳh | /iːh/ | reht > riht > right; flyht > flight; līoht > līht > light | |||
āh, āg#, oh, og# | /ɔuh/ | /ɔuh/ | ([x] > ∅)/ou/ > /oː/ | /əʊ/ (British), /oʊ/ (American) | dāg > dāh > dough |
([x] > /f/)/ɔf/ | /ɒf/,/ɔːf/ | trog > trough | |||
āhC, ohC, ōhC | /ɔuh/ | /ɔuh/ | /ɔː/ | /ɔː/ | āhte > ought; dohtor > daughter; þoht > thought; sōhte > sought |
ōh#, ōg# | /ouh/ > /uːh/ | /uːh/ | ([x] > ∅)/əu/ | /aʊ/ | bōg > bough; plōg > plōh > plough |
([x] > /f/)/ʊf/ | (centralized)/ʌf/ | ġenōg, ġenōh > enough; tōh > tough; ruh > rough | |||
uh, ug#, ūh, ūg# | /uːh/ | (non-centralized)/ʊf/ | Weōcetun > Woughton |
This table describes the main changes from Late Proto-Indo-European and Proto-Germanic up through Old English, Middle English and Modern English. It focuses on the Old English and Middle English changes leading to the modern forms. Other tables are also available to cover specific areas in more detail:
This table only describes the changes in accented syllables. Vowel changes in unaccented syllables were very different and much more extensive. In general:
NOTE: The Old English words in this table are given in their Anglian form, since this is the form that underlies Modern English. However, standard Old English was based on the West Saxon dialect, and when the two dialects differ, the West Saxon form is indicated with a WS in parentheses following the Anglian form.
NOTE: In this table, abbreviations are used as follows:
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1"Pre-Germanic" in this context refers to a post-PIE language that maintains PIE phonology but with morphological adjustments made as necessary to account for the Proto-Germanic form. Reconstructions are only given for solidly reconstructible Proto-Indo-European roots.
Late PIE 1 | Proto-Germanic 1 | Condition | Old English | Middle English | Modern English | Examples | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
i-umlaut 2 | i-umlaut 2 | i-umlaut 2 | |||||||
a, o, *h₂e, h₃e, H̥ | a | æ | e | /a/ | /e/ | /æ/; RP /ɑː/ | /ɛ/ | PG *paþaz > OE pæþ > "path"; PG *batizǫ̂ > OE betera > "better"; PG *taljaną > OE tellan > "to tell" | |
(leng.)/aː/ | /ɛː/ | /eɪ/ | /iː/; /eɪ/; /ɛ/ | PG *hwalaz > OE hwæl > "whale"; PG *matiz > OE, ME mete "food" > "meat"; PG *stadiz > OE, ME stede > "stead" | |||||
(+g)/ai/ | /ɛi/ > /ai/ | /eɪ/ | /eɪ/ | PG *dagaz > OE dæġ > "day" | |||||
(+h)/au/ | /ɛu/ | /ɔː/; /æf/ | /(j)uː/ | PG *hlahtraz > OE hlæhtor (WS hleahtor) > "laughter"; PG *slahtiz > OE sleht (WS slieht) > ME sleight "slaughter" | |||||
+n,m | a,o | e | /a/ (occ. /o/) | /e/ | /æ/; occ. GA /ɔ/, RP /ɒ/ | /ɛ/ | PG *mannz, manniz > OE man, mon > "man", plur. men > "men"; PG *hamuraz > OE hamor > "hammer"; PG *handuz > OE hand > "hand"; PG *sange > OE past sang > "sang"; PG *lambaz > OE lamb > "lamb"; Latin candēla > OE candel > "candle"; PG *gandrǫ̂ > OE gandra > "gander"; PG *langaz > OE lang, long > "long"; PG *sandijaną > OE sendan > "send"; PG *bankiz > OE benċ > "bench"; PG *hanjō > OE henn > "hen" | ||
(leng.)/aː/ | /ɛː/ | /eɪ/ | /iː/; /eɪ/; /ɛ/ | PG *namǫ̂ > OE nama > "name"; PG lamǫ̂ > OE lama > "lame"; PG *banǫ̂ > OE bana "slayer" > "bane" | |||||
+mf,nþ,ns | ō | ē | /oː/ | /eː/ | /uː/; /ʌ/; /ʊ/ | /iː/ | PreG *donts, dontes > PG *tanþz, tanþiz > OE tōþ > "tooth", plur. tēþ > "teeth"; PG *gans, gansiz > OE gōs > "goose", plur. gēs > "geese"; PG *anþaraz > OE ōþer > "other" | ||
(+CC)/o/ | /e/ | GA /ɔ/, RP /ɒ/; GA /ɔː/ | /ɛ/ | PG *samftijaz, samftô > OE sēfte, *sōfta >! OE sōfte > "soft"; PG *anstiz > OE ēst "favor" > ME "este" | |||||
+lC | a | æ > e | /a/ | /e/ | /ɔː/ | /ɛ/ | PG *fallaną > OE fallan (WS feallan) > "to fall"; PG *fallijaną > OE fællan > fellan (WS fiellan) > "to fell" | ||
(+ld)/ɔː/ | /ɛː/ | GA /oʊ/, RP /əʊ/ | /iː/; /eɪ/; /ɛ/ | PG *aldaz, aldizǫ̂ > OE ald (WS eald) > "old", ældra (WS ieldra) "older" > "elder"; PG *haldaną > OE haldan (WS healdan) > "to hold" | |||||
+rc,rg,rh | æ > e | e | /e/ | /e/ | GA /ɑ/(+r), RP /ɑː/ | GA /ɑ/(+r), RP /ɑː/ | Latin arca > OE erc (WS earc) > "ark" | ||
+rC (C not c,g,h) | ea | e | /a/ | /e/ | GA /ɑ/(+r), RP /ɑː/ | GA /ɑ/(+r), RP /ɑː/ | PG *harduz > OE heard > "hard" | ||
before a,o,u | a | (by analogy) æ | /a/ | /a/ | /æ/; RP /ɑː/ | /æ/; (RP) /ɑː/ | Latin cattus > OE catt > "cat" | ||
(leng.)/aː/ | /aː/ | /eɪ/ | /eɪ/ | PG *talō > OE talu > "tale"; PG *bakaną, -iþi > OE bacan > "to bake", 3rd sing. pres. indic. bæcþ "bakes" | |||||
(+g,w)/au/ | /au/ | /ɔː/ | /ɔː/ | PG plur. *dagôs > OE dagas "days" > dial. "dawes"; PG *laguz > OE lagu > "law"; PG *clawō > OE clawu > "claw" | |||||
before later a,o,u | ea | eo | /a/ | /e/ | /æ/; (RP) /ɑː/ | /ɛ/ | |||
(leng.)/aː/ | /ɛː/ | /eɪ/ | /iː/; /eɪ/; /ɛ/ | PG *alu(þ) > OE ealu > "ale"; PG *asiluz > OE eosol (WS esol) "donkey" | |||||
(+g,w)/au/ | /ɛu/ | /ɔː/ | /(j)uː/ | PG *awī > OE eowu > "ewe" | |||||
before hs,ht,hþ + final -iz | N/A | i (occ. ie) | N/A | /i/ | N/A | /aɪ/ | PIE *nokwtis > PG *nahtiz > OE nieht > OE niht > "night" | ||
e, *h₁e, occ. i+C*e,a,o | e | e | N/A | /e/ | N/A | /ɛ/ | N/A | PIE *nizdos > PG *nestaz > OE nest > "nest"; PG *helpaną > OE helpan > "to help"; PG *fehtaną > OE fehtan (WS feohtan) "to fight" (irreg.); PG *berkaną > OE bercan (WS beorcan) > "to bark" | |
(leng.)/ɛː/ | N/A | /iː/; /eɪ/; /ɛ/ | N/A | PG *brekaną > OE brecan > "to break"; PG *ebnaz > OE ef(e)n > "even"; OE feþer > "feather" | |||||
(+g,h)/ɛi/ > /aɪ/ | N/A | /eɪ/ | N/A | PG *wegaz > OE weġ > "way"; PG *regnaz > OE reġn > "rain"; PG *seglaz > OE seġl > "sail" | |||||
(+ld)/eː/ | N/A | /iː/ | N/A | PG *felduz > OE feld > "field"; PG *geldaną > OE ġeldan (WS ġieldan) "to pay" > "to yield" | |||||
+m | i | N/A | /i/ | N/A | /ɪ/ | N/A | PG *remǫ̂ > OE rima > "rim"; PG *nemaną > OE niman "to take" > archaic "to nim" | ||
(leng.)/eː/ | N/A | /iː/ | N/A | ||||||
+rC (C not c,g,h); wV; C (C not c,g) +later a,o,u | eo | N/A | /e/ | N/A | /ɛ/; (+r) GA /ɑ/(+r), RP /ɑː/ | N/A | PG *werþaną > OE weorðan "to become"; PG *hertǭ > OE heorte > "heart" | ||
(leng.)/ɛː/ | N/A | /iː/; /eɪ/; /ɛ/ | N/A | PG *etaną > OE eotan (WS etan) > "to eat"; PG *beraną > OE beoran (WS beran) > "to bear" | |||||
(+w)/ɛu/ | N/A | /(j)uː/ | N/A | ||||||
+ late final hs,ht,hþ | i (occ. ie) | N/A | /i/ | N/A | /ɪ/ | N/A | PG *sehs > OE siex > "six"; PG *rehtaz > OE riht > "right" | ||
i, (h₁)e+C*i, (h₁)e+C*y, (h₁)e+nC | i | i | i | /i/ | /i/ | /ɪ/ | /ɪ/ | PG *fiską > OE fisċ > "fish"; PG *hringaz > OE hring > "ring"; PG *bidjaną > OE biddan "to pray" > "to bid"; PG *itiþi > OE 3rd sing. pres. indic. iteþ "eats"; PG *skiriþi > OE 3rd sing. pres. indic. sċirþ (WS sċierþ) "shears"; PG *stihtōjaną > OE stihtian "to establish" | |
(leng.)/eː/ | /eː/ | /iː/ | /iː/ | PG *wikō > OE wicu > "week" | |||||
(+g)/iː/ | /iː/ | /aɪ/ | /aɪ/ | Latin tegula > OE tiġele > "tile"; PG *brigdilaz > OE briġdel > "bridle" | |||||
(+ld,nd)/iː/ | /iː/ | /aɪ/ | /aɪ/ | PG *blindaz > OE blind > "blind" /blaɪnd/; PG *kildaz (plur. *kildōzō) OE ċild > "child" /tʃaɪld/; PG *wildijaz > OE wilde > "wild" /waɪld/ | |||||
+ mf,nþ,ns | ī | ī | /iː/ | /iː/ | /aɪ/ | /aɪ/ | PG *fimf > OE fīf > "five"; PG *linþijō > OE līþe "gentle" > "lithe" | ||
(+CC)/i/ | /i/ | /ɪ/ | /ɪ/ | PG *fimf tigiwiz > OE fīftiġ > "fifty" | |||||
+rC (C not c,g,h); w | io > eo | i | /e/ | /i/ | /ɛ/ | /ɪ/ | PG *liznōjaną > OE liornian > OE leornian > "learn"; PG *a + firrijaną > OE afirran (WS afierran) "to remove" (cf. feorr "far") | ||
(+w)/eu/ > /iu/ | /iu/ | /(j)uː/ | /(j)uː/ | PG *niwulaz > OE niowul, neowul "prostrate"; PG *spiwiz > OE spiwe "vomiting"; PG *hiwiz > OE hīw > "hue" | |||||
before a,o,u | i (io, eo) | N/A | /i/ (/e/) | N/A | /ɪ/ (/ɛ/) | N/A | PG *milukz > OE mioluc,meolc > "milk" | ||
(leng.)/eː/ (/ɛː/) | N/A | /iː/ (/iː/; /eɪ/; /ɛ/) | N/A | ||||||
(+g)/iː/ (/ɛi/ > /ai/) | /iː/ | /ai/ (/eɪ/) | /aɪ/ | ||||||
u, *n̥(H), *m̥(H), *l̥(H), *r̥(H)3 | u | u | y | /u/ | /i/ | /ʌ/; /ʊ/ | /ɪ/ | PG *sunuz > OE sunu > "son"; PG *kumaną, -iþi > OE cuman > "to come", 3rd sing. pres. indic. cymþ "comes"; PG *guldijaną > OE gyldan > "to gild" | |
(leng.)/oː/ | /eː/ | /uː/; /ʌ/; /ʊ/; (+r) GA /ɔr/, RP /ɔː/ | /iː/ | PreG *dhurus > PG *duruz > OE duru > "door"; PG *widuz > OE widu >! OE wudu > "wood"; PG *ubilaz > OE yfel > "evil" | |||||
(+g)/uː/ | /iː/ | /aʊ/ | /aɪ/ | OE ryġe > "rye" | |||||
(+w)/uː/ | /iu/ | /aʊ/ | /(j)uː/ | ||||||
+ mf,nþ,ns | ū | ȳ | /uː/ | /iː/ | /aʊ/ | /aɪ/ | PG *munþz > OE mūþ > "mouth"; PG *kunþijaną > OE cȳþan "to make known" > ME "kithe" | ||
(+CC)/u/ | /i/ | /ʌ/; /ʊ/ | /ɪ/ | PG *tunskaz > OE tūsc > "tusk"; PG *wunskijaną > OE wȳsċan > "wish"; PG *kunþiþō > OE cȳþþ(u) > "kith" | |||||
before non-nasal + a,e,o | o | (by analogy) e | /o/ | /e/ | GA /ɔ/, RP /ɒ/ | /ɛ/ | PG *drupǫ̂ > OE dropa > "drop"; PG *fulką > OE folc > "folk" | ||
(leng.)/ɔː/ | /ɛː/ | GA /oʊ/, RP /əʊ/; (+r) GA /ɔr/, RP /ɔː/ | /iː/; /eɪ/; /ɛ/ | PG *fulǫ̂ > OE fola > "foal"; PG *nusuz (*nusōu?) > OE nosu > "nose"; PG *hupōjaną > OE hopian > "to hope" | |||||
(+g,h,w)/ɔu/ | /ɛi/ > /ai/ | GA /oʊ/, RP /əʊ/; GA /ɔːf/, RP /ɒf/ | /eɪ/ | PG *duhter, duhtriz > OE dohter > "daughter", plur. dehter "daughters"; PG *trugaz > OE trog > "trough"; PG *bugǫ̂ > OE boga > "bow" /boʊ/ | |||||
(+ld,rd)/ɔː/ | /ɛː/ | GA /oʊ/, RP /əʊ/; (+r) GA /ɔr/, RP /ɔː/ | /iː/; /eɪ/; /ɛ/ | PG *guldaz > OE gold > "gold"; PG *burdą > OE bord > "board" | |||||
ē(H), eh₁ | ǣ > ā | ē | ē | /eː/ | /eː/ | /iː/ | /iː/ | PG *slǣpaną > OE slēpan (WS slǣpan) > "to sleep", Latin strāta > OE strēt (WS strǣt) > "street"; PG *dǣdiz > OE dēd (WS dǣd) > "deed"; Latin cāseus > OE ċēse (WS ċīese) > "cheese" | |
(+CC)/e/ | /e/ | /ɛ/ | /ɛ/ | ||||||
(+g,h)/iː/ | /iː/ | /aɪ/ | /aɪ/ | PG *nǣhaz, nǣhistaz > OE nēh (WS nēah) "near" > "nigh", superl. nēhst (WS nīehst) "nearest" > "next" | |||||
+n,m | ō | ē | /oː/ | /eː/ | /uː/ | /iː/ | PG *mǣnǫ̂ > OE mōna > "moon"; PG *kwǣniz > OE kwēn > "queen" | ||
+w; ga,go,gu | ā | ǣ | /ɔː/ | /ɛː/ | GA /oʊ/, RP /əʊ/ | /iː/; /eɪ/; /ɛ/ | |||
(+g)/ɔu/ | /ɛi/ > /ai/ | GA /oʊ/, RP /əʊ/ | /eɪ/ | PG *mǣgôz > OE māgas "relatives" | |||||
(+w)/ɔu/ | /ɛu/ | GA /oʊ/, RP /əʊ/ | /(j)uː/ | PG *knǣwaną, -iþi > OE cnāwan > "to know", 3rd sing. pres. indic. cnǣwþ "knows" | |||||
ēi, iz, etc.4 | ē | ē | ē | /eː/ | /eː/ | /iː/ | /iː/ | PG *hēr > OE hēr > "here"; PIE *mizdhā > PG *mēdō > OE mēd "reward" | |
(+g,h)/iː/ | /iː/ | /aɪ/ | /aɪ/ | OE past hēht "called" > "hight" | |||||
(+w)/eu/ > /iu/ | /eu/ > /iu/ | /(j)uː/ | /(j)uː/ | ||||||
ā, ō, aH, oH, eh₂, eh₃; an+K, on+K, h₂en+K, h₃en+K | ō; ą̄+h | ō | ē | /oː/ | /eː/ | /uː/; /ʌ/; /ʊ/ | /iː/ | PG *fōtz, fōtiz > OE fōt > "foot", plur. fēt > "feet" | |
(+CC)/o/ | /e/ | GA /ɔ/, RP /ɒ/; GA /ɔː/ | /ɛ/ | PG *kōpi-dǣþ > OE cēpte > "kept"; PG *mōti-dǣþ > OE mētte > "met" | |||||
(+g,h)/uː/ | /iː/ | /aʊ/; /ʌf/ | /aɪ/ | PG *swōganą > OE swōgan "to sound" > ME /suːə/ > "sough" /saʊ/; PG *bōgaz > OE bōg > ME /buːh/ > "bough" /baʊ/; PG *tōhaz > OE tōh > ME /tuːh/ > "tough" /tʌf/; PG past *sōh-dǣþ > OE sōhte > ME /sɔuhtə/ > "sought" | |||||
(+w)/ɔu/ | /eu/ > /iu/ | GA /oʊ/, RP /əʊ/ | /(j)uː/ | PG *grōwaną > OE grōwan > "grow" | |||||
(h₁)ei, ī, iH; (h₁)en+K, in+K | ī; į̄+h | ī | ī | /iː/ | /iː/ | /aɪ/ | /aɪ/ | PG *wībą > OE wīf > "wife"; PG *līhiþi > 3rd sing. pres. indic. līþ (WS līehþ) "lends"; PIE *lengwhtos > PG *lį̄htaz > OE līht (WS lēoht) > "light" (in weight) | |
(+CC)/i/ | /i/ | /ɪ/ | /ɪ/ | ||||||
(+g,h)/iː/ | /iː/ | /aɪ/ | /aɪ/ | PG *hīgōjaną > OE hīgian > "hie" | |||||
(+w)/iu/ | /iu/ | /(j)uː/ | /(j)uː/ | PG *Tīwaz > OE Tīw (name of a god) + -es "'s" + dæġ "day" > "Tuesday" | |||||
ū, uH; *n̥+K, un+K | ū; ų̄+h | ū | ȳ | /uː/ | /iː/ | /aʊ/ | /aɪ/ | PG *mūs, mūsiz > OE mūs "mouse", plur. mȳs > "mice"; PG *hūdijaną > OE hȳdan > "to hide" | |
(+CC)/u/ | /i/ | /ʌ/; /ʊ/ | /ɪ/ | PG *rūstaz > OE rūst > "rust"; *pn̥kʷstis > PG *fų̄hstiz > OE fȳst > "fist" | |||||
(+g,h)/uː/ | /iː/ | /aʊ/; /ʌf/ | /aɪ/ | PG *būganą > OE būgan "to bend" > "bow"; PG *rūhaz > OE rūh > "rough" /rʌf/; PG *drūgijaz > OE drȳge > "dry" | |||||
(+w)/uː/ | /iu/ | /aʊ/ | /(j)uː/ | OE trūwian "to trust" > archaic "trow" /traʊ/ | |||||
ai, oi, h₂ei, h₃ei | ai | ā | ǣ | /ɔː/ | /ɛː/ | GA /oʊ/, RP /əʊ/; (+r) GA /ɔr/, RP /ɔː/ | /iː/; /eɪ/; /ɛ/ | PG *stainaz > OE stān > "stone"; PreG perfect *roidhe > PG past *raide > OE rād > "rode"; PreG *oyerā > PG *airō > OE ār > "oar"; PIE *ayes > PG *aiz > OE ār "bronze" > "ore"; PG *hwaitiją > OE hwǣte > "wheat" | |
(+CC)/a/ | /a/ | /æ/; RP /ɑː/ | /æ/; RP /ɑː/ | PG *faittiz > OE fǣtt > "fat" | |||||
(+g,h)/ɔu/ | /ɛi/ > /ai/ | GA /oʊ/, RP /əʊ/ | /eɪ/ | PG *aiganą > OE āgan > "owe"; PG *daigaz > OE dāg, dāh > "dough" | |||||
(+w)/ɔu/ | /ɛu/ | GA /oʊ/, RP /əʊ/ | /(j)uː/ | PG *maiwiz > OE mǣw > "mew" | |||||
au, ou, h₂eu, h₃eu | au | ēa | ē | /ɛː/ | /eː/ | /iː/; /eɪ/; /ɛ/ | /iː/ | PG *auzǭ > OE ēare > "ear"; PG *hauzijaną > OE hēran (WS hīeran) > "to hear" | |
(+w)/ɛu/ | /eu/ > /iu/ | /(j)uː/ | /(j)uː/ | PG *skrawwǫ̂ > OE sċrēawa > ME "shrewe" > "shrew" | |||||
+c,g,h; rc,rg,rh;lc,lg,lh | ē | ē | /eː/ | /eː/ | /iː/ | /iː/ | PG *auke(?), *aukijaną > OE ēc, ēċan (WS ēac, īeċan) "also, to increase" > ME "eke, eche" > "eke" (archaic), "to eke" | ||
(+g,h)/iː/ | /iː/ | /aɪ/ | /aɪ/ | PG *augǭ > OE ēġe (WS ēage) > "eye"; PG *hauhaz, hauhistaz > OE hēh (WS hēah) > "high", superl. hēhst (WS hīehst) "highest" | |||||
(h₁)eu | eu | ēo | N/A | /eː/ | N/A | /iː/ | N/A | PG *deupaz > OE dēop > "deep"; PG *beudaną > OE bēodan "to command" | |
(+w)/eu/ > /iu/ | N/A | /(j)uː/ | N/A | PG *hrewwaną > OE hrēowan > "to rue" | |||||
+c,g,h; rc,rg,rh; lc,lg,lh | ē | N/A | /eː/ | N/A | /iː/ | N/A | PG *reukaną > OE rēcan (WS rēocan) > "to reek" | ||
(+g,h)/iː/ | N/A | /aɪ/ | N/A | PG *fleugǭ > OE flēge (WS flēoge) > "fly"; PG *leuganą > OE lēgan (WS lēogan) > "to lie"; PIE *leuktos > PG *leuhtaz > OE lēht (WS lēoht) > "light" (brightness) | |||||
(h₁)eu+C*i, (h₁)eu+C*y | iu | N/A | īo > ēo | N/A | /eː/ | N/A | /iː/ | PIE *newios > PG *niujaz > OE nīwe > "new"; PG *biudiþi > 3rd sing. pres. indic. bīott (WS bīett) "commands" | |
(+w) N/A | /eu/ > /iu/ | N/A | /(j)uː/ | PG *triwwiz > *triwwijaz > OE trīowe, trēowe > ME "trewe" > "true" | |||||
+c,g,h; rc,rg,rh; lc,lg,lh | N/A | ī | N/A | /iː/ | /aɪ/ | /aɪ/ | PIE *leuktionom > PG *liuhtijaną > OE līhtan (WS līehtan) "to light" |
1A + separates the sounds that produced the Proto-Germanic vowels in question from the sounds that formed the conditioning environment. The notation C* means a sequence of zero or more consonants.
2 I-umlaut refers to a sound change that took place around 500 AD with pervasive effects on English vowels. Specifically, vowels were fronted or raised whenever an /i/ or /j/ followed in the next syllable. Nearly every vowel was affected. Affected vocabulary is shown in a different color.
3 PIE *n̥ and *n̥H became Proto-Germanic un; similarly for *m̥, *l̥ and *r̥. K refers to either of the PIE sounds ḱ or k, which fell together in Proto-Germanic and the other centum languages; or to any of the nine PIE velars when followed directly by a voiceless consonant (especially t). H refers to any laryngeal sound. The ogonek (e.g. ą, ǭ) indicates a nasal vowel. Long vowels are noted with a macron (e.g. ē, ō). Extralong vowels are noted with a circumflex (e.g. ô).
4 The origins of Proto-Germanic ē are somewhat in dispute.
The Germanic languages are a branch of the Indo-European language family spoken natively by a population of about 515 million people mainly in Europe, North America, Oceania, and Southern Africa. The most widely spoken Germanic language, English, is also the world's most widely spoken language with an estimated 2 billion speakers. All Germanic languages are derived from Proto-Germanic, spoken in Iron Age Scandinavia, Iron Age Northern Germany and along the North Sea and Baltic coasts.
The Germanic umlaut is a type of linguistic umlaut in which a back vowel changes to the associated front vowel (fronting) or a front vowel becomes closer to (raising) when the following syllable contains, , or.
Proto-Germanic is the reconstructed proto-language of the Germanic branch of the Indo-European languages.
The phonology of the open back vowels of the English language has undergone changes both overall and with regional variations, through Old and Middle English to the present. The sounds heard in modern English were significantly influenced by the Great Vowel Shift, as well as more recent developments in some dialects such as the cot–caught merger.
Middle Dutch is a collective name for a number of closely related West Germanic dialects whose ancestor was Old Dutch. It was spoken and written between 1150 and 1500. Until the advent of Modern Dutch after 1500 or c. 1550, there was no overarching standard language, but all dialects were mutually intelligible. During that period, a rich Medieval Dutch literature developed, which had not yet existed during Old Dutch. The various literary works of the time are often very readable for speakers of Modern Dutch since Dutch is a rather conservative language.
Assimilation is a sound change in which some phonemes change to become more similar to other nearby sounds. A common type of phonological process across languages, assimilation can occur either within a word or between words.
English phonology is the system of speech sounds used in spoken English. Like many other languages, English has wide variation in pronunciation, both historically and from dialect to dialect. In general, however, the regional dialects of English share a largely similar phonological system. Among other things, most dialects have vowel reduction in unstressed syllables and a complex set of phonological features that distinguish fortis and lenis consonants.
In linguistics, vowel length is the perceived length of a vowel sound: the corresponding physical measurement is duration. In some languages vowel length is an important phonemic factor, meaning vowel length can change the meaning of the word, for example in Arabic, Czech, Dravidian languages, some Finno-Ugric languages, Japanese, Kyrgyz, Samoan, and Xhosa. Some languages in the past likely had the distinction even though their descendants do not, with an example being Latin and its descendent Romance languages.
In phonetics, vowel reduction is any of various changes in the acoustic quality of vowels as a result of changes in stress, sonority, duration, loudness, articulation, or position in the word, and which are perceived as "weakening". It most often makes the vowels shorter as well.
In historical linguistics, vowel breaking, vowel fracture, or diphthongization is the sound change of a monophthong into a diphthong or triphthong.
Old English phonology is the pronunciation system of Old English, the Germanic language spoken on Great Britain from around 450 to 1150 and attested in a body of written texts from the 7th–12th centuries. Although its reconstruction is necessarily somewhat speculative, features of Old English pronunciation have been inferred partly from the sounds used in modern varieties of English, partly from the spellings used in Old English literature, partly from analysis of Old English poetry, and partly from comparison with other Germanic languages.
There is significant phonological variation among the various Yiddish dialects. The description that follows is of a modern Standard Yiddish that was devised during the early 20th century and is frequently encountered in pedagogical contexts.
Dutch phonology is similar to that of other West Germanic languages, especially Afrikaans and West Frisian.
English diphthongs have undergone many changes since the Old and Middle English periods. The sound changes discussed here involved at least one phoneme which historically was a diphthong.
The traditional English pronunciation of Latin, and Classical Greek words borrowed through Latin, is the way the Latin language was traditionally pronounced by speakers of English until the early 20th century. Although this pronunciation is no longer taught in Latin classes, it is still broadly used in the fields of biology, law, and medicine.
Middle English phonology is necessarily somewhat speculative since it is preserved only as a written language. Nevertheless, there is a very large text corpus of Middle English. The dialects of Middle English vary greatly over both time and place, and in contrast with Old English and Modern English, spelling was usually phonetic rather than conventional. Words were generally spelled according to how they sounded to the person writing a text, rather than according to a formalised system that might not accurately represent the way the writer's dialect was pronounced, as Modern English is today.
French exhibits perhaps the most extensive phonetic changes of any of the Romance languages. Similar changes are seen in some of the northern Italian regional languages, such as Lombard or Ligurian. Most other Romance languages are significantly more conservative phonetically, with Spanish, Italian, and especially Sardinian showing the most conservatism, and Portuguese, Romanian, Catalan, and Occitan showing moderate conservatism.
The phonology of Old Saxon mirrors that of the other ancient Germanic languages, and also, to a lesser extent, that of modern West Germanic languages such as English, Dutch, Frisian, German, and Low German.
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.
The Cornish language separated from the southwestern dialect of Common Brittonic at some point between 600 and 1000 AD. The phonological similarity of the Cornish, Welsh, and Breton languages during this period is reflected in their writing systems, and in some cases it is not possible to distinguish these languages orthographically. However, by the time it had ceased to be spoken as a community language around 1800 the Cornish language had undergone significant phonological changes, resulting in a number of unique features which distinguish it from the other neo-Brittonic languages.
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