Charting the rise and demise of a phonotactically motivated change in Scots

Author:

Maguire Warren1,Alcorn Rhona1,Molineaux Benjamin1,Kopaczyk Joanna2,Karaiskos Vasilios1,Los Bettelou1

Affiliation:

1. Linguistics and English Language , University of Edinburgh , Edinburgh , UK

2. English Language & Linguistics , University of Glasgow , Glasgow , UK

Abstract

Abstract Although Old English [f] and [v] are represented unambiguously in Older Scots orthography by <f> and <v> (or <u>) in initial and morpheme-internal position, in morpheme-final position <f> and <v>/<u> appear to be used interchangeably for both of these Old English sounds. As a result, there is often a mismatch between the spellings and the etymologically expected consonant. This paper explores these spellings using a substantial database of Older Scots texts, which have been grapho-phonologically parsed as part of the From Inglis to Scots (FITS) project. Three explanations are explored for this apparent mismatch: (1) it was a spelling-only change; (2) there was a near merger of /f/ and /v/ in Older Scots; (3) final [v] devoiced in (pre-)Older Scots but this has subsequently been reversed. A close analysis of the data suggests that the Old English phonotactic constraint against final voiced fricatives survived into the pre-Literary Scots period, leading to automatic devoicing of any fricative that appeared in word-final position (a version of Hypothesis 3), and this, interacting with final schwa loss, gave rise to the complex patterns of variation we see in the Older Scots data. Thus, the devoicing of [v] in final position was not just a phonetically natural sound change, but also one driven by a pre-existing phonotactic constraint in the language. This paper provides evidence for the active role of phonotactic constraints in the development of sound changes, suggesting that phonotactic constraints are not necessarily at the mercy of the changes which conflict with them, but can be involved in the direction of sound change themselves.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

Reference31 articles.

1. Aitken, A. J. 1981. The Scottish vowel-length rule. In Michael Benskin & Michael Samuels (eds.), So meny people, longages and tonges: Philological essays in Scots and Medieval English presented to Angus Mcintosh, 131–157. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.

2. Aitken, A. J. & Caroline Macafee. 2002. The Older Scots vowels. Edinburgh: Scottish Text Society.

3. Alcorn, Rhona, Vasilis Karaiskos, Joanna Kopaczyk, Bettelou Los, Warren Maguire & Benjamin Molineaux. forthcoming. From Inglis to Scots: A corpus of grapho-phonological correspondences (1380–1500) with associated corpus of changes. Edinburgh: The University of Edinburgh. http://www.amc.lel.ed.ac.uk/fits/.

4. Alcorn, Rhona, Benjamin Molineaux, Joanna Kopaczyk, Vasilios Karaiskos, Bettelou Los & Warren Maguire. 2017. The emergence of Scots: Clues from Germanic *a reflexes. In Janet Cruickshank & Robert McColl Millar (eds.), Before the storm: Papers from the forum for research on the languages of Scotland and Ulster triennial meeting, Ayr 2015, 1–32. Aberdeen: Forum for Research on the Languages of Scotland and Ulster.

5. Bermúdez-Otero, Ricardo. 1998. Prosodic optimization: The Middle English length adjustment. English Language and Linguistics 2(2). 167–197.

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