Great Vowel Shift: Difference between revisions

From FrathWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
Line 28: Line 28:
The shift involves most long and tense vowels to basically "move up" or become diphthongised.  This would mean that /aː/ shifted up to /eː/, and /eː/ shifted up to /iː/, and /iː/ being already at the top, became the diphthong /aj/.  On the other side, /oː/ shifted to /uː/, and /uː/ become the diphthong /aw/. If the /uː/ did not originally have two syllables, it became /ʌ/, and likewise many /a/ sounds had shifted to /æ/ in monosyllabic endings.
The shift involves most long and tense vowels to basically "move up" or become diphthongised.  This would mean that /aː/ shifted up to /eː/, and /eː/ shifted up to /iː/, and /iː/ being already at the top, became the diphthong /aj/.  On the other side, /oː/ shifted to /uː/, and /uː/ become the diphthong /aw/. If the /uː/ did not originally have two syllables, it became /ʌ/, and likewise many /a/ sounds had shifted to /æ/ in monosyllabic endings.
<br/>
<br/>
<div style="text-align: center;">
[Image:Grvowsh.gif]
{| style="text-align: center; background: #f9f9f9; border: 1pt solid #c0c0c0;"
!colspan=11 style="text-align:center; background: #efefef;"| Vowels
|-
| Front ||  Back
|-
| aj || aw
|-
| ↑  ||  ↑
|-
|  iː  ||  uː
|-
| ↑  || ↑
|-
|  eː  || oː
|-
| ↑
|-
|  aː
|}
</div>


=Affects on Grammar=
=Affects on Grammar=

Revision as of 10:13, 4 October 2008


The Great Vowel Shift is a phonetic shift in the English language which separates the Middle English era from the Early Modern English era, or the general Modern English era.

Time Period

Possible Reasons

Simplified Version of the Shift


Vowels
Front Central Back
Unround Unrounded Rounded
High iː - ɪ uː - ʊ
Mid eː - ɛ ə/ʌ oː - ɔ
Low æ aː/a
All entries are: Tense - Lax

The shift involves most long and tense vowels to basically "move up" or become diphthongised. This would mean that /aː/ shifted up to /eː/, and /eː/ shifted up to /iː/, and /iː/ being already at the top, became the diphthong /aj/. On the other side, /oː/ shifted to /uː/, and /uː/ become the diphthong /aw/. If the /uː/ did not originally have two syllables, it became /ʌ/, and likewise many /a/ sounds had shifted to /æ/ in monosyllabic endings.
[Image:Grvowsh.gif]

Affects on Grammar

Examples

Sources and Further Reading