Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Vowel breaking

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In historical linguistics, vowel breaking, vowel fracture, or diphthongization is the change of a monophthong into a diphthong or triphthong.

Contents

Types

Vowel breaking may be unconditioned or conditioned. It may be triggered by the presence of another sound or by stress, or it may triggered in no particular way.

Assimilation

Sometimes vowel breaking is defined as a subtype of diphthongization; then, it refers to harmonic (assimilatory) process that involves diphthongization triggered by a following vowel or consonant.

The original pure vowel typically breaks into two segments, and the first segment matches the original vowel and the second segment is harmonic with the nature of the triggering vowel or consonant. For example, the second segment may be /u/ (a back vowel) if the following vowel or consonant is back (such as velar or pharyngeal), and the second segment may be /i/ (a front vowel) if the following vowel or consonant is front (such as palatal).

Thus, vowel breaking, in this restricted sense, can be viewed as an example of assimilation of a vowel to a following vowel or consonant.

Unconditioned

Vowel breaking is sometimes not assimilatory, not triggered by a neighboring sound. This is the case with the Great Vowel Shift in English: all cases of /iː uː/ changed to diphthongs.

Stress

Sometimes vowel breaking occurs only in stressed syllables. For instance, Vulgar Latin open-mid /ɛ ɔ/ changed to diphthongs only when stressed.

English

Vowel breaking is a very common sound change in the history of the English language, occurring at least three times (with some varieties adding a fourth) listed here in reverse chronological order:

Southern American English

Vowel breaking is characteristic of the "Southern drawl" of Southern American English, where the short front vowels have developed a glide up to [j], and then in some areas back down to schwa: pat [pæjət], pet [pɛjət], pit [pɪjət].

Great Vowel Shift

The Great Vowel Shift changed the long vowels /iː uː/ to diphthongs. They became Modern English /aɪ aʊ/.

  • Old English īs > Modern English ice /aɪs/
  • Old English hūs > Modern English house /haʊs/
  • Middle English

    In early Middle English, a vowel /i/ was inserted between a front vowel and a following /h/ (pronounced [ç] in this context), and a vowel /u/ was inserted between a back vowel and a following /h/ (pronounced [x] in this context). This is a prototypical example of the narrow sense of "vowel breaking" as described above: The original vowel breaks into a diphthong that assimilates to the following consonant, gaining a front /i/ before a palatal consonant and /u/ before a velar consonant.

    Old English

    In Old English, two forms of harmonic vowel breaking occurred: breaking and retraction, and back mutation.

    In prehistoric Old English, breaking and retraction changed stressed short and long front vowels i, e, æ to short and long diphthongs spelled io, eo, ea when followed by h or by r, l + another consonant (short vowels only), and sometimes w (only for certain short vowels).

    Examples are:

  • Proto-Germanic *fallan > Anglo-Frisian *fællan > Old English feallan "fall"
  • PG *erþō > OE eorþe "earth"
  • PG *lirnoːjan > OE liornan "learn"
  • In late prehistoric Old English, back mutation changed short front i, e, æ to short diphthongs spelled io, eo, ea before a back vowel in the next syllable, if the intervening consonant is of a certain nature. The specific nature of which consonants trigger back umlaut and which block them varies from dialect to dialect.

    Old Norse

    Proto-Germanic stressed short e becomes ja or (before u) regularly in Old Norse except after w, r, l. Examples are:

  • PG *ek(a) "I" → (east) ON jak, Swedish jag, Danish and Norwegian Bokmål jeg, and Icelandic ekég (but Jutlandic æ, a, Nynorsk eg).
  • Faroese has both. The standard form is eg, while the dialects of Suðuroy have jeg.
  • PG *hertōn "heart" → ON hjarta, Swedish hjärta, Faroese hjarta, Danish hjerte
  • PG *erþō "earth" → Proto-Norse *erþū → ON jǫrð, Swedish, Danish jord, Faroese jørð
  • According to some scholars, the diphthongisation of e is an unconditioned sound change, whereas other scholars speak about epenthesis or umlaut.

    Scottish Gaelic

    Vowel breaking is present in Scottish Gaelic with the following changes occurring often but variably between dialects: Archaic Irish → Scottish Gaelic and Archaic Irish → Scottish Gaelic Specifically, central dialects have more vowel breaking than others.

    Romance languages

    Many Romance languages underwent vowel breaking. The Vulgar Latin open vowels e /ɛ/ and o /ɔ/ in stressed position underwent breaking only in open syllables in French and Italian, but in both open and closed syllables in Spanish. Vowel breaking was completely absent in Portuguese and Catalan. The result of breaking varies between languages: e and o became ie and ue in Spanish, ie and uo in Italian, and ie and eu /ø/ in French.

    In the table below, words with breaking are bolded.

    Romanian

    Romanian underwent the general Romance breaking only with /ɛ/, asit did not have /ɔ/:

  • Latin pellis > Romanian piele "skin"
  • It underwent a later breaking of stressed e and o to ea and oa before a mid or open vowel:

  • Latin porta > Romanian poartă "gate"
  • Latin flōs (stem flōr-) > Romanian floare "flower"
  • Sometimes a word underwent both forms of breaking in succession:

  • Latin petra > Early Romanian pietră > Romanian piatră "stone" (where ia results from hypothetical *iea)
  • The diphthongs that resulted from the Romance and the Romanian breakings were modified when they occurred after palatalized consonants.

    Quebec French

    In Quebec French, long vowels are generally diphthongized in the last syllable.

  • tard [tɑːʁ][tɑɔ̯ʁ]
  • père [pɛːʁ][paɛ̯ʁ]
  • fleur [flœːʁ][flaœ̯ʁ]
  • fort [fɔːʁ][fɑɔ̯ʁ]
  • autre [oːtʁ̥][ou̯tʁ̥]
  • neutre [nøːtʁ̥][nøy̯tʁ̥]
  • pince [pɛ̃ːs][pẽɪ̯̃s]
  • onze [ɔ̃ːz][õʊ̯̃z]
  • Proto-Indo-European

    Some scholars believe that Proto-Indo-European (PIE) i, u has a kind of breaking before an original laryngeal in Greek, Armenian and Tocharian, ans the other Indo-European languages have monophthongs:

  • PIE *gʷih3wos → *gʷioHwos "alive" → Gk. ζωός, Toch. B śāw-, śāy- (but Skt. jīvá-, Lat. vīvus)
  • PIE *protih3kʷom → *protioHkʷom "front side" → Gk. πρόσωπον "face", Toch. B pratsāko "breast" (but Skt. prátīka-)
  • PIE *duh2ros → *duaHros "long" → Gk. δηρός, Arm. *twārerkar (Skt. dūrá-, Lat. dūrus).
  • However, the hypothesis has not been widely adopted.

    References

    Vowel breaking Wikipedia