Hogg A Grammar of Old English, Volume 1
1. Auflage 2011
ISBN: 978-1-4443-4134-8
Verlag: John Wiley & Sons
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
Phonology
E-Book, Englisch, 368 Seiten, E-Book
ISBN: 978-1-4443-4134-8
Verlag: John Wiley & Sons
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
First published in 1992, A Grammar of Old English, Volume 1:Phonology was a landmark publication that in the interveningyears has not been surpassed in its depth of scholarship andusefulness to the field. With the 2011 posthumous publication ofRichard M. Hogg's Volume 2: Morphology, Volume1 is again in print, now in paperback, so that scholars can ownthis complete work.
* Takes account of major developments both in the field of OldEnglish studies and in linguistic theory
* Takes full advantage of the Dictionary of OldEnglish project at Toronto, and includes fullcross-references to the DOE data
* Fully utilizes work in phonemic and generative theory andrelated topics
* Provides material crucial for future research both indiachronic and synchronic phonology and in historicalsociolinguistics
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Preface viii
List of abbreviations xi
1 Introduction 1
2 Orthography and phonology 10
3 The vowels in Germanic 52
I Primitive Germanic (§§1-4) 52
II Vowel harmony (§§5-12) 53
III Loss of nasals and compensatory lengthening (§§13-15) 55
IV Diphthongization (§§16-19) 56
V Influence of */z/ (§§20-1) 59
VI Long vowels (§§22-6) 59
VII Unstressed vowels (§§27-33) 62
VIII Raising of back vowels (§34) 64
4 The consonants in Germanic 66
I Primitive Germanic (§§1-3) 66
II Verner's Law (§§4-5) 67
III Germanic approximants (§§6-9) 68
IV Consonant loss (§10) 70
V West Germanic gemination (§§11-14) 71
VI Miscellanea (§§15-19) 72
5 Old English vowels 74
I First fronting and associated changes (§§3-15) 75
II Breaking (§§16-34) 82
III Restoration of A (§§35-40) 93
IV Lowering of second elements of diphthongs (§§41-6) 99
V Palatal diphthongization (§§47-73) 104
VI I-umlaut (§§74-86) 118
VII Second fronting (§§87-92) 135
VIII Anglian smoothing (§§93-102) 139
IX Back umlaut (§§103-12) 149
X Palatal umlaut (§§113-18) 163
XI Palatal monophthongization (§§119-23) 166
XII Compensatory lengthening (§§124-30) 169
XIII Hiatus (§§131-54) 172
XIV Merger of /io/ and /eo/ (§§155-62) 185
XV West Saxon developments of high front vowels and diphthongs (§§163-75) 190
XVI The influence of /w/ (§§176-87) 198
XVII The development of Kentish front vowels (§§188-96) 203
XVIII Changes in quantity (§§197-205) 206
XIX Monophthongization of diphthongs (§§206-14) 210
XX Merger of /æ/ and /w/ (§§215-16) 213
6 Unstressed vowels 214
I First fronting and associated changes (§§2-6) 214
II Breaking, palatal diphthongization, i-umlaut, and back umlaut (§§7-12) 217
III Syncope and apocope (§§13-25) 220
IV Shortening (§§26-33) 227
V Epenthesis and syllabification (§§34-45) 230
VI Mergers of unstressed vowels (§§46-62) 235
VII Unstressed medial vowels (§§63-71) 242
7 Old English consonants 246
I Dissimilation (§§4-14) 247
II Palatalization and assibilation (§§15-43) 252
III Development of fricatives (i): lenition (§§44-53) 270
IV Development of fricatives (ii): voicing and devoicing (§§54-68) 276
V Post-vocalic approximants (§§69-76) 283
VI Consonant clusters (§§77-97) 287
VII Loss of final nasals (§§98-100) 298
VIII Late Old English changes (§§101-3) 299
References 301
Word index 315