In:Investigating West Germanic Languages: Studies in honor of Robert B. Howell
Edited by Jennifer Hendriks and B. Richard Page
[Studies in Germanic Linguistics 8] 2024
► pp. 14–31
Homorganic lengthening in late Old English revisited
Published online: 16 May 2024
https://doi.org/10.1075/sigl.8.02pag
https://doi.org/10.1075/sigl.8.02pag
Abstract
Minkova & Stockwell (1992) and Kruger (2020) claim that homorganic lengthening is limited to the environment before
-ld and -nd, with only high vowels lengthening before -nd. This
paper examines evidence in the Ormulum and from other sources for lengthening and finds ample
evidence of regular vowel lengthening before -ld, -nd, -mb,
-rd, and -rn. The cross-linguistic tendency of phonetic lengthening of vowels
and sonorants in sequences of vowel plus sonorant plus homorganic voiced consonant provided a phonetic motivation for
the lengthening. Already existing Old English words like frēond ‘friend’ and fēond
‘fiend’ served as a basis for a phonological reanalysis of the phonetically lengthened vowel as underlyingly long.
Keywords: quantity, vowel lengthening, Ormulum, historical phonology
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.A bird’s eye view of homorganic lengthening
- 3.Evidence of homorganic lengthening in the Ormulum
- 4.The motivation for homorganic lengthening
- 5.The distribution of lengthened reflexes of homorganic lengthening in PDE revisited
- 6.Conclusion
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