Theme: Great vowel shift in Middle English. Introduction. Great vowel shift in English language. Middle English vowel system. Vowels in the unstressed position Vowels under stress The Development of Vowel System in Middle English Phonetical changes


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great vowel shift

Word

Vowel pronunciation

Late Middle English before the GVS

Modern English after the GVS

bite

/iː/

/aɪ/

meet

/eː/

/iː/

meat

/ɛː/

mate

/aː/

/eɪ/

out

/uː/

/aʊ/

boot

/oː/

/uː/

boat

/ɔː/

/oʊ/

Middle English vowel system

Before the Great Vowel Shift, Middle English in Southern England had seven long vowels, /iː eː ɛː aː ɔː oː uː/. The vowels occurred in, for example



, the words bitemeetmeatmateboatboot, and out, respectively

Southern Middle English vowel system

front

back

close

/iː/: bite

/uː/: out

close-mid

/eː/: meet

/oː/: boot

open-mid

/ɛː/: meat

/ɔː/: boat

The words had very different pronunciations in Middle English from their pronunciations in Modern English.

Long i in bite was pronounced as /iː/ so Middle English bite sounded like Modern English beet /biːt/.

Long e in meet was pronounced as /eː/ so Middle English meet sounded similar to Modern English mate /meɪt/

Long a in mate was pronounced as /aː/, with a vowel similar to the broad a of spa.

Long o in boot was pronounced as /oː/, similar to modern oa in General American boat /oʊ/.

After around 1300, the long vowels of Middle English began changing in pronunciation as follows:
    • Diphthongisation - The two close vowels, /iː uː/, became diphthongs (vowel breaking).
    • Vowel raising - The other five, /eː ɛː aː ɔː oː/, underwent an increase in tongue height (raising).

The Development of Vowel System in Middle English
    • In ME and NE word stress acquired greater positions freedom and greater role in word derivation.
    • Recessive tendency – stress in loan-words moved closer to the beginning of the word (e.g. in French words the stress is usually placed on the ultimate or pen-ultimate syllable, but the stress in the words of the French origin that penetrated into English has moved to the beginning of the word).
    • ME vertu [ver’tju:] – NE virtue [‘vз:t∫ə]
    • Rhythmic tendency – regular alternation of stressed and unstressed syllables (3 or more) that creates rhythm and has led to the appearance of the secondary stress.
    • ME diso’beien – NE ,diso’bei


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