In:English Historical Linguistics: Historical English in contact
Edited by Bettelou Los, Chris Cummins, Lisa Gotthard, Alpo Honkapohja and Benjamin Molineaux
[Current Issues in Linguistic Theory 359] 2022
► pp. 75–96
Chapter 5Old Northumbrian in the Scottish Borders
Evidence from place-names
Published online: 2 February 2022
https://doi.org/10.1075/cilt.359.05hou
https://doi.org/10.1075/cilt.359.05hou
Abstract
Recovering the Earliest English Language in
Scotland: Evidence from place-names (REELS) is a research
project funded for three years by The Leverhulme Trust at the University of
Glasgow: http://berwickshire-placenames.glasgow.ac.uk/. The project team
is using a place-name survey of the historical county of Berwickshire in the
Scottish Borders, the heartland of Anglo-Saxon settlement in Scotland from
the seventh to eleventh centuries, to investigate the Northumbrian dialect
of Old English and its development into Older Scots. The place-name data are
being analysed for evidence of the lexis, semantics, morphology and
phonology of Old Northumbrian, a language variety poorly attested in other
(written and epigraphic) sources. This chapter presents some discoveries
from the ongoing project, alongside a discussion of the strengths and
limitations of place-name evidence in this context.
Keywords: Berwickshire, Old English, Old Northumbrian, Older Scots, place-names, Scottish Borders
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Dictionary evidence and place-name evidence
- 3.Morphological evidence
- 4.Phonological evidence
- 5.Lexical evidence
- 6.Semantic evidence
- 7.Further information
Notes Sources References
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