Scandinavian influence on Southern Lowland Scotch eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 139 pages of information about Scandinavian influence on Southern Lowland Scotch.

Scandinavian influence on Southern Lowland Scotch eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 139 pages of information about Scandinavian influence on Southern Lowland Scotch.

  15.  SOME CHARACTERISTICS OF SCOTCH.  O.E. [)A], [-A].

There are no monuments in O.Sco. dating back to the 13th or first half of the 14th Century.  The first of any importance that we have is “The Bruce” of 1375.  By this time the language of Scotland had already undergone many changes that made its general character quite different from literary or Midland English.  None of these changes tended so much to differentiate the two as the very different development of O.E. long and short a.  In the south O.E. a > [-e] (name > n[-e,]m > n[-e]m); but O.E. [-a] > [-o,], later [-o] (st[-a]n > st[-o,]n > st[-o]ne, h[-a]m > h[-o,]m > h[-o]me).  The change of [-a] to [-o,] (probably about 1200) took place before that of [)a] to [-a], else they would have coincided and both developed to [-o] or [-e].  The last is precisely what took place in Scotland.  O. Nhb. [)a] > [-a] and early coincided with original [-a], and along with it developed to later [-e], as only short a did in the south.  The two appear together in rhyme in Barbour.  Their graphic representation is a, ai, ay.  The sound in Barbour is probably [-ae] or [-e,].  In “Wallace” Fr. entre is also written entray, entra.  Fr. a and ei and Eng. diphthong ai (< aeg) rhyme regularly with Sco. a, ay, ai, from O.E. [-a].  On O.E. and O.N. [-a]- and M. Sco. [-e]-sounds in general see Curtis, Sec.Sec.1-165.

16.  CURTIS’S TABLE.

The following (see Curtis Sec.Sec.144-145) illustrates the development of O.E. [)a], and [-a], in England and Scotland: 

1.  Central Scotland. {O.E. [)a]}
{ } > an [-e]-vowel. 
{O.E. [-a]}

2.  S. Scotland and       {O.E. [)a]}
Ellis’s D. 31*         {           } > [-e] > an i-
in England.            {           }     fracture in
{O.E. [-a]}     the mdn. diall.

{ > an [-e]-vowel.
3.  The rest of Northern { O.E. [)a] { > [-e], later
England and Midland. { { [-i]-fracture in
{ { D 25, 26, 28, 29.
{
{ O.E. [-a] > [-o] or [-u],
with fracture.

4.  Southern England { O.E. [)a] > an e-fracture or
{ i-fracture.
{ O.E. [-a] > [-u] or [-o].

[Footnote:  Ellis’s D 31 = N. W. Yorkshire, Cumberland, Westmoreland and N. Lancashire.]

In 1.  O.E. h[-a]m > h[-e]m, n[)a]me > n[-e]m.

In 2. h[-a]m > h[-e]m > hi[schwa]m, n[)a]me > n[-e]m >
ni[schwa]m.

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