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The Sounds of Old English

The Sounds of Old English

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The Sounds of Old English. How Do Linguists Know About Ancient Pronunciation?. Looking at the alphabet—letter values do not change at random, should be somewhat similar as today, especially consonants. Vowels are a little tricky—they tend to change more. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Sounds of Old English

The Sounds of Old English

Page 2: The Sounds of Old English

How Do Linguists Know About Ancient Pronunciation?

• Looking at the alphabet—letter values do not change at random, should be somewhat similar as today, especially consonants. Vowels are a little tricky—they tend to change more.

Page 3: The Sounds of Old English

• Usually no strict rules in past Old English for spelling, so scribes probably wrote as they spoke—with evidence from language variation.

• Comparative reconstruction—working back from present known forms.

• Known sound changes, e.g., hit becoming it can easily happen as initial h dropped also in Modern English (I saw ’im)

• Poetic evidence—how poets use rhyme of alliteration.

Page 4: The Sounds of Old English

Old English Texts• No early manuscripts right after Anglo-

Saxons arrived in Britain; only a few inscriptions in the Runic alphabet

Page 5: The Sounds of Old English

• With the coming of Christianity in 597, there was a need for manuscripts for religious purposes

• Materials start from about the year 700, mostly glossaries (lists) of Latin words

• Probably many texts were lost

• From about 850 on more religious texts, lives of saints, sermons, etc.

Page 6: The Sounds of Old English

• Secular literature, epic poetry, e.g. Beowulf

• Also works translated from Latin

• Texts remaining total about 3.5 million words

Page 7: The Sounds of Old English

What did Old English Writing Look Like?

Page 8: The Sounds of Old English

The Sound System• Vowels very different from in Modern

English• Set of seven long and short vowels• Two diphthongs with long and short

varieties• Many consonants much the same, some

showed differences• Much variation; sometimes scribes made

mistakes

Page 9: The Sounds of Old English

The Vowels

Long Vowels Short Vowels

ā a–æ æ

ē e

ī i

ō o

ū u–

y [ü] y [ü]

Long and Short Vowels Contrasted

Page 10: The Sounds of Old English

DiphthongsLong Short

ēa ea

ēo eo

Page 11: The Sounds of Old English

Consonants—The Differences

f, s Voiced (like v and z) between vowels and voiced sounds

Voiceless (like f and s) elsewhere

ð , þ Symbols interchangeable

Voiced between vowels and voiced sounds

Voiceless elsewhere

Page 12: The Sounds of Old English

c Like č before front vowels

k elsewhere

g Like y before front vowels

g elsewhere

h Like voiceless fricative [χ]

Page 13: The Sounds of Old English

r was probably trilled

Other consonants much like expected

Contrast of short and long consonants

sc Like š (dish)

cg Like (edge)

Page 14: The Sounds of Old English

Prayer Our FatherKing James Version

Our Father, who art in heaven,Hallowed by Thy name.Thy kingdom come, Thine will be doneOn earth as it is in heaven.Give us this day our daily bread,And forgive us our trespassesAs we forgive those who trespass against us.And lead us not into temptationBut deliver us from evil.

Page 15: The Sounds of Old English

Reading of Our Father

Page 16: The Sounds of Old English

Vowel Mutations

• Happened also in ancient times, e.g., goose/geese; mouse/mice; old/elder; man/men; blood/bleed

• In early Old English another vowel mutation, i-mutation (umlaut), probably in 7th century but not too much later

Page 17: The Sounds of Old English

• When followed by a syllable with the high front vowel i, the vowel in a stressed syllable became front, e.g., *fotiz became fet, Modern English feet.

• Also provides evidence for when certain Latin words were borrowed into OE, e.g., Latin caseus in in OE cyse, so we know this word was already in OE in the 7th century.