Middle English phonology


Middle English phonology is necessarily somewhat speculative, since it is preserved only as a written language. Nevertheless, there is a very large text corpus of Middle English. The dialects of Middle English vary greatly over both time and place, and in contrast with Old English and Modern English, spelling was usually phonetic rather than conventional. Words were generally spelled according to how they sounded to the person writing a text, rather than according to a formalised system that might not accurately represent the way the writer's dialect was pronounced, as Modern English is today.
The Middle English speech of the city of London in the late 14th century is used as the standard Middle English dialect in teaching and when specifying "the" grammar or phonology of Middle English. It is this form that is described below, unless otherwise indicated.
In the rest of the article, abbreviations are used as follows:

Sound inventory

The surface sounds of Chaucerian Middle English are shown in the tables below.

Consonants

1. The exact nature of Middle English r is unknown. It may have been an alveolar approximant, as in most Modern English accents, an alveolar tap or an alveolar trill. This article uses indiscriminately.

Consonant allophones

The sounds marked in parentheses in the table above are allophones:
In Old English,,, were allophones of,,, respectively, occurring between vowels or voiced consonants. That led to many alternations: hūs vs. hūses ; wīf vs. wīfes . In Middle English, voiced allophones become phonemes, and they are solidly established in Modern English as separate phonemes by several sources:
  1. Borrowings from foreign languages, especially Latin, Ancient Greek, and Old French, which introduced sounds where they had not occurred: modern fine vs. vine ; ether vs. either.
  2. Dialect mixture between Old English dialects that voiced initial fricatives and the more standard dialects that did not. Compare fat vs. vat and fox vs. vixen.
  3. Analogical changes that levelled former alternations: grass, grasses, grassy and glass, glasses, glassy with replacing the original between vowels. Contrast wife vs. wives; greasy, still with a in some dialects and staff, with two plurals, analogical staffs and inherited staves.
  4. Loss of final, resulting in voiced fricatives at the end of a word where only voiceless fricatives had occurred. That is the source of the modern distinctions house vs. to house, teeth vs. to teethe, half vs. to halve.
  5. Reduction of double consonants to single consonants. That explains the contrast between kiss, to kiss vs. house, to house with in the verb.
  6. A Sandhi effect that introduced the voiced fricative /ð/ instead of original /θ/ at the beginning of unstressed function words. Contrast this with initial vs. thistle with initial.
  7. A sound change that caused fricatives to be voiced when preceded by a fully unstressed syllable. This change is reflected in the modern pronunciation of the endings spelt -s, which now have phonemic shape -, having developed in Middle English from - to - and then, after the deletion of the unstessed vowel, to -. The sound change also affects function words ending in original - that are normally unstressed. Contrast this with vs. is with ; off with vs. of with, originally the same word; with with in many varieties of English vs. pith with.
The status of the sources in Chaucer's Middle English is as follows:
The strongest distinction was between and because of the large number of borrowings from Old French. It is also the only distinction that is consistently indicated in spelling, as and respectively. sometimes appears as, especially in borrowings from Greek and sometimes as. Both and are spelled.

Vowels

Monophthongs

Middle English had a distinction between close-mid and open-mid long vowels but no corresponding distinction in short vowels. Although the behavior of open syllable lengthening seems to indicate that the short vowels were open-mid in quality, according to Lass, they were close-mid. Later, the short vowels were in fact lowered to become open-mid vowels, as is shown by their values in Modern English.
The front rounded vowels existed in the southwest dialects of Middle English, which developed from the standard Late West Saxon dialect of Old English, but not in the standard Middle English dialect of London. The close vowels and are direct descendants of the corresponding Old English vowels and were indicated as. may have existed in learned speech in loanwords from Old French, also spelled, but, as it merged with, becoming in Modern English, rather than, it can be assumed that was the vernacular pronunciation that was used in French-derived words.
The mid-front rounded vowels likewise had existed in the southwest dialects but not in the standard Middle English dialect of London. They were indicated as. Sometime in the 13th century, they became unrounded and merged with the normal front mid vowels. They derived from the Old English diphthongs and. There is no direct evidence that there was ever a distinction between open-mid and close-mid, but it can be assumed because of the corresponding distinction in the unrounded mid front vowels. would have derived directly from Old English, and derived from the open syllable lengthening of short, from the Old English short diphthong.
The quality of the short open vowel is unclear. Early in Middle English, it presumably was central since it represented the coalescence of the Old English vowels and, and at the time of Middle English breaking, it could not have been a front vowel since rather than was introduced after it. During the Early Modern English period, it was fronted, in most environments, to in southern England, and it and even closer values are found in the contemporary speech of southern England, North America and the southern hemisphere: it remains in much of Northern England, Scotland and the Caribbean. Meanwhile, the long open vowel, which developed later because of open syllable lengthening, was. It was gradually fronted, to successively, and, in the 16th and the 17th centuries.

[|Diphthongs]

1The Old English sequences, produced late Middle English, apparently after passing through early Middle English : OE grōwan > LME. However, early Middle English had Middle English breaking produce late Middle English : OE tōh > EME > LME. Apparently, early became before the occurrence of Middle English breaking, which generated new occurrences of, which later became.
All of the above diphthongs came about within the Middle English era. Old English had a number of diphthongs, but all of them had been reduced to monophthongs in the transition to Middle English. Middle English diphthongs came about by various processes and at various time periods. Diphthongs tended to change their quality over time. The changes above occurred mostly between early and late Middle English. Early Middle English had a distinction between open-mid and close-mid diphthongs, and all of the close-mid diphthongs had been eliminated by late Middle English.
The following processes produced the above diphthongs:
The following sections describe the major phonological processes occurring between written Late West Saxon and the end of Middle English, conventionally dated to around 1500 AD.

Homorganic lengthening

Late in Old English, vowels were lengthened before certain clusters:,,,,. Later on, the vowels in many of these words were shortened again, giving the appearance that no lengthening happened; but evidence from the Ormulum indicates otherwise. For details see Phonological history of Old English: Vowel lengthening.

Stressed vowel changes

included matched pairs of short and long vowels, including seven pairs of pure vowels,, and two pairs of height-harmonic diphthongs, and. Two additional pairs of diphthongs, and, existed in earlier Old English but had been reduced to and, respectively, by late Old English times.
In the transition to Middle English, this system underwent major changes, eliminating the diphthongs and leaving only one pair of low vowels, but with a vowel distinction appearing in the long mid vowels:
This left an asymmetric system consisting of five short vowels and six long vowels , with additional front-rounded vowels in the southwest area. Some symmetry was restored by open syllable lengthening, which restored a long low vowel.

Reduction and loss of unstressed vowels

Unstressed vowels were gradually confused in late Old English, although the spelling lagged behind, due to the existence of a standardized spelling system. By early Middle English, all unstressed vowels were spelt, probably representing. Also in late Old English, final unstressed became ; during the Middle English period, this final was dropped when it was part of an inflectional syllable. Around Chaucer's time, final was dropped; judging from inflectional evidence, this occurred first when the following word began with a vowel. A century or so later, unstressed also dropped in the plural and genitive ending -es and the past ending -ed.
These changes steadily effaced most inflectional endings, e.g.:
In the last two examples, the stressed vowel was affected by open-syllable lengthening.

Vocalization of and development of new diphthongs

The sound, which had been a post-vocalic allophone of, became vocalized to. This occurred around the year 1200.
A new set of diphthongs developed from combinations of vowel+ or vowel+, and also due to borrowing from French – see Diphthongs above.

Breaking

During the 12th or 13th centuries, a vowel was inserted between a front vowel and a following , and a vowel was inserted between a back vowel and a following . Short was treated as a back vowel in this process. See [|H-loss], below.

Open-syllable lengthening

Around the 13th century, short vowels were lengthened in an open syllable. In addition, non-low vowels were lowered: >, >, >, >. This accounts, for example, for the vowel difference between staff and the alternative plural staves. This process was restricted in the following ways:
  1. It did not occur when two or more syllables followed, due to the opposing process of trisyllabic laxing.
  2. It only occasionally applied to the high vowels and, e.g. OE wudu > ME > wood; OE wicu > ME > week. Most instances of and remained as such, e.g. OE hnutu > NE nut, OE riden > NE ridden.
The effects of open-syllable lengthening and trisyllabic laxing often led to differences in the stem vowel between singular and plural/genitive. Generally these differences were regularized by analogy in one direction or another, but not in a consistent way:
In late Old English, vowels were shortened before clusters of two consonants when two or more syllables followed. Later in Middle English this process was expanded, and applied to all vowels when two or more syllables followed. This led to the Modern English variations between divine vs. divinity, school vs. scholarly, grateful vs. gratitude, etc. In some cases, later changes have led to apparently anomalous results, e.g. south vs. southern with only two syllables. This change is still fairly productive in Modern English.

Pre-cluster shortening

In late Old English, vowels were shortened before clusters of three consonants:
As shown by ghastly, this shortening occurred before the raising of OE to EME, which occurred in the transition to Middle English.
Later in Middle English, vowels were shortened before clusters of two consonants, except before and in some cases where [|homorganic lengthening] applied. Examples:
Double consonants were reduced to single ones. This took place after open syllable lengthening; the syllable before a geminate was a closed syllable, hence vowels were not lengthened before doubled consonants. The loss of gemination may have been stimulated by its small functional load—by this time there were few minimal pairs of words distinguished solely by the single vs. double consonant contrast.

H-loss

The phoneme, when it occurred in the syllable coda, is believed to have had two allophones: the voiceless palatal fricative, occurring after front vowels, and the voiceless velar fricative, occurring after back vowels. The usual spelling in both cases was, which is retained today in words like night and taught.
These sounds were lost during the later Middle English and Early Modern English eras. The timing of this process was dependent on dialect; the fricatives were still pronounced in some educated speech in the 16th century, but they had disappeared by the late 17th. Loss of the fricatives was accompanied by some compensatory lengthening or diphthongization of preceding vowels. In some cases, the velar fricative developed into ; as such the preceding vowel was shortened, and the of a diphthong was absorbed. However, the palatal fricative in no instances became.
Some possible developments are illustrated below:
This variable outcome, along with other variable changes and the ambiguity of the Middle English spelling accounts for the numerous pronunciations of Modern English words in -ough-.
spelled -gh- is realized as even today in some traditional dialects of northern England and more famously Scots. Some accents of northern England lack the, instead exhibiting special vowel developments in some such words; for example, night as and in the dialectal words owt and nowt. Also, in northern England, a distinction is often preserved between the vowel in words like weigh, weight and eight, and the of wait and late.
The modern phoneme most commonly appears today in the typically Scottish word loch and in names such as Buchan. Here the is usual in Scotland, although the alternative is becoming more common among some younger speakers. The same is true in Wales, in names such as Loughor. English speakers from elsewhere may replace the in such cases with, but some use in imitation of the local pronunciations.

Great Vowel Shift

The Great Vowel Shift was a fundamental change in late Middle English and Early Modern English that affected the pronunciation of all of the long vowels. The high vowels and were diphthongized, ultimately producing the modern diphthongs and, and all other vowels were raised.

Diphthong loss

Although not normally considered a part of the Great Vowel Shift, during the same time period most of the pre-existing Middle English diphthongs were monophthongized:
The remaining diphthongs developed as follows:
For a detailed description of the changes between Old English and Middle/Modern English, see the article on the phonological history of English. A summary of the main vowel changes is presented below. The spelling of Modern English largely reflects Middle English pronunciation.

Monophthongs

This table presents the general developments. Many exceptional outcomes occurred in particular environments: vowels were often lengthened in late Old English before,, ; vowels changed in complex ways before, throughout the history of English etc. Vowels were diphthongized in Middle English before, and new diphthongs arose in Middle English by the combination of vowels with Old English w, g >, and ġ ; for more information, see the section below. The only conditional development considered in detail below is Middle English open-syllable lengthening. In the column on modern spelling, CV means a sequence of a single consonant followed by a vowel.
The Modern English vowel usually spelled au does not appear in the above chart. Its main source is late Middle English < early and, which come from various sources: Old English aw and ag ; diphthongization before ; borrowings from Latin and French. Other sources are Early Modern English lengthening of before ; occasional shortening and later re-lengthening of Middle English ; and in American English, lengthening of short o before unvoiced fricatives and voiced velars.
As mentioned above, Modern English is derived from the Middle English of London, which is derived largely from Anglian Old English, with some admixture of West Saxon and Kentish. One of the most noticeable differences among the dialects is the handling of original Old English. By the time of the written Old English documents, the Old English of Kent had already unrounded to, and the late Old English of Anglia unrounded to. In the West Saxon area, remained as such well into Middle English times and was written u in Middle English documents from the area. Some words with the sound were borrowed into London Middle English, where the unfamiliar was substituted with :
Some apparent instances of modern e for Old English y are actually regular developments, particularly if the y is a development of earlier ie from i-mutation of ea, as the normal i-mutation of ea in Anglian is e; for example, stern < styrne <, steel < stȳle < . Also, some apparent instances of modern u for Old English y may actually be from the influence of a related form with unmutated u: sundry < syndriġ, influenced by sundor "apart, differently".

Diphthongs