In the history of English phonology, there were many diachronic sound changes affecting vowels, especially involving phonemic splits and mergers.
Contents |
The Great Vowel Shift was a series of chain shifts that affected historical long vowels but left short vowels largely alone. It is one of the primary causes of the idiosyncrasies in English spelling.
The shortening of ante-penultimate syllables in Middle English created many long–short pairs. The result can be seen in such words as,
Middle English | from long V | from short V |
---|---|---|
ī : i | child /aɪ/ divine mine |
children /ɪ/ divinity mineral |
ē : e ea : e |
serene /iː/ dream |
serenity /ɛ/ dreamt |
ā : a | nation /eɪ/ sane |
national /æ/ sanity |
ō : o | goose /uː/ school |
gosling /ɒ/ scholarly |
oa : o ō : o (Latin) |
holy /oʊ/ cone know* |
holiday /ɒ/ conical knowledge |
ū : u | south /aʊ/ pronounce |
southern /ʌ/ pronunciation |
*Middle English /ou/ merged with /o/.
Tense–lax neutralization refers to a neutralization, in a particular phonological context in a particular language, of the normal distinction between tense and lax vowels.
In some varieties of English, this occurs in particular before /ŋ/ and (in rhotic dialects) before coda /r/ (that is, /r/ followed by a consonant or at the end of a word); it also occurs, to a lesser extent, before tautosyllabic /ʃ/ and /ɡ/. Some examples of neutralization of /ɛ/ to /eɪ/ before /ɡ/ are beg, egg, Greg, keg, leg and peg's coming to rhyme with Craig, Hague, plague and vague.
Some varieties (including most American English dialects) have significant vocalic neutralization before intervocalic /r/, as well. See English-language vowel changes before historic r.
Mergers before intervocalic r are quite widespread in North American English.
Various mergers before historic coda r are very common in English dialects.
|