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It is common to divide England into four dialect areas for the Old English period. First of all note that by England that part of mainland Britain is meant which does not include Scotland, Wales and Cornwall. These three areas were Celtic from the time of the arrival of the Celts some number of centuries BC and remained so well into the Middle English period.
It is common to divide England
into four dialect areas for the Old English period. First of all note
that by England that part of mainland Britain is meant which does not
include Scotland, Wales and Cornwall. These three areas were Celtic
from the time of the arrival of the Celts some number of centuries BC
and remained so well into the Middle English period.
The dialect areas of England
can be traced back quite clearly to the Germanic tribes which came and
settled in Britain from the middle of the 5th century onwards. There
were basically three tribal groups among the earlier settlers in England:
the Angles, the Saxons and the Jutes. The Angles came from the area
of Angeln (roughly the Schleswig-Holstein of today), the Saxons from
the area of east and central Lower Saxony and the Jutes from the Jutland
peninsula which forms west Denmark today. The correlation between original
tribe and later English dialect is as follows:
Germanic tribes and regions
in England where they mainly settled
Saxons — South of the Thames (West Saxon area)
Angles — Middle and Northern England (Mercia and Northumbria), including lowland Scotland
Jutes
— South-East of England (Kent)
Of these three groups the
most important are the Saxons as they established themselves as the
politically dominant force in the Old English period. A number of factors
contributed to this not least the strong position of the West Saxon
kings, chief among these being Alfred (late 9th century). The West Saxon
dialect was also strongest in the scriptorias (i.e. those places where
manuscripts were copied and/or written originally) so that for written
communication West Saxon was the natural choice.
A variety of documents have
nonetheless been handed down in the language of the remaining areas.
Notably from Northumbria a number of documents are extant which offer
us a fairly clear picture of this dialect area. At this point one should
also note that the central and northern part of England is linguistically
fairly homogeneous in the Old English period and is termed Anglia. To
differentiate sections within this area one speaks of Mercia which is
the central region and Northumbria which is the northern part (i.e.
north of the river Humber).
A few documents are available
to us in the dialect of Kent (notably a set of sermons). This offers
us a brief glimpse at the characteristics of this dialect which in the
Middle English period was of considerable significance. Notable in Kentish
is the fact that Old English /y:/ was pronounced /e:/ thus giving us
words like evil in Modern English where one would expect something like
ivil.
Writing and sounds in Old English
ORTHOGRAPHY There are a number
of letters used in Old English which were later discontinued; of these
the following are the main ones: Þ ‘thorn’ and ð ‘eth’ (later
replaced by th indicating the voiced and voiceless ambidental fricatives), ʒ
‘yogh’ used for g, ‘wynn’, i.e. ‘joy’, was a form of the
letter w used in early texts, æ ‘ash’ a ligature (two letters in
one form) composed of a and e and representing a sound intermediate
between /a/ and /e/.
PHONOLOGY The writing system
of Old English is by and large phonological, i.e. every letter represents
a phoneme. This applies above all to fricatives though diphthongs, the
affricate /dʒ/
and the fricative /ʃ/ used more than one letter.
fīf [fi:f] ‘five’
frefer [frevər] ‘consolation’ hūs [hu:s]‘house’ rīsan
[ri:zan] ‘rise’ þurh [θurx] ‘through’ ōðer [o:ðər] ‘other’
gān [gɑ:n] ‘go’ gift [jift] ‘dowry’
fugol [fuɣol] ‘bird’ cēne [ke:nə] ‘sharp’,
cyrice [tʃyritʃə] ‘church’
ALLOPHONY OF /g/ Before back
vowels [g] is found, [ɣ] between back vowels and [j] before
and between high vowels. There were two affricates /tʃ/ and /dʒ/, the first deriving from palatalisation
in early Old English and the second inherited from pre-Old English.
The fricatives /f, θ, s/
had two main allophones, a voiceless one at the beginning or end of
a word or in the environment of a voiceless segment and a voiced one
when found intervocalically. This alternation can be seen to this day
and is responsible for present-day alternations like wife : wives.
The letter c represented the
phoneme /k/, when it occurred before a consonant (cwic, ‘alive’),
a back vowel (cuman, ‘come’) or a front vowel which had arisen due
to i-umlaut (cynelic, ‘kingly’). It also represented the phoneme
/tʃ/
which arose due to the early palatalisation of velars cyrice ‘church’.
CONSONANT LENGTH Old English
had both long vowels and long consonants. This was an inherited feature
of Germanic and has only been maintained in the present-day Scandinavian
languages (bar Danish). Examples of long consonants are cyssan ‘kiss’,
settan ‘set’, siþþan ‘since’.
PHONOTACTICS Clusters existed
in Old English which are not permissible today. These were simplified
in the Middle English period chiefly by the reduction of clusters of
/h/ or /w/ and a following sonorant: hlāf ‘loaf’, wrītan ‘write’.
The other major phonotactic change is the simplification of onsets consisting
of a velar stop followed by an alveolar nasal (permissible in German)
gnagan ‘gnaw’, cnēo ‘knee’. In nearly all these cases present-day
orthography indicates the former phonetic realisation.
OLD ENGLISH VOWEL SYSTEM Note
the distinction between two types of low vowels, front and back. Moreover,
there are four diphthongs in later Old English ea, æa [æa, æ:a] and
eo, ēo [eə, e:ə] which were sensitive to the consonants which followed
them. Examples for the contrast in length are listed in the columns
below.
STRESS IN OLD ENGLISH This
rested on the lexical root of a word. At this stage the language had
long since developed the type of stress accent — stressed syllables
are longer and louder than unstressed ones — which is still typical
of English and other Germanic languages. Prefixes with nouns could also
take stress as in ˡandswaru (answer) but verbs always
have root stress as in forˡgiefan (forgive).
With the influx of Romance words in the Middle English period alternative stress pattern arise. By and large a system begins to emerge in late Middle English for foreign words which demands stress on the first heavy syllable starting from the penultimate syllable of a word and moving leftwards, i.e. towards the beginning of the word. This system — although it shows many exceptions in Modern English — would appear to have replaced the Germanic pattern because it resulted in the right stress pattern when applied to inherited native words as well.