Scottish vowel length rule
The Scottish vowel length rule, also known as Aitken's law, describes how vowel length in Scots, Scottish English, and, to some extent, Ulster English[1] and Geordie[2] is conditioned by the phonetic environment of the vowel. Primarily, the rule is that certain vowels (described below) are phonetically long in the following environments:
- Before /r/.
- Before a voiced fricative (/v, z, ð, ʒ/).
- Before a morpheme boundary.
- In a word-final open syllable, save for the HAPPY vowel /e/ (or, in Geordie, /iː/).
Exceptions can also exist for particular vowel phonemes, dialects, words, etc., some of which are discussed in greater detail below.
Phonemes
[edit]The underlying phonemes of the Scottish vowel system (that is, in both Scottish Standard English dialects and Scots dialects) are as follows:[3]
Aitken's Scots vowel number |
1 | 2 | 3 | 16 | 4 | 8 | 8a | 10 | 9 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 14 | 11 | 12 | 18 | 13 | 15 | 17 | 19 | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Scots phoneme | /ai~əi/★ | /i/★ | /ei/[a] | /ɛ/★ | /e/★ | /eː~eːə/[b] | /əi/ | /oi/ | /o/ | /ʉ/★[c] | /ø/★[d] | /jʉ/ | /iː/★[e] | /ɔː/ | /ɔ/★[f] | /ʌʉ/★[g] | — | /ɪ/[h] | /a/★[i] | /ʌ/ | ||
Scottish English phoneme | /ai~əi/★ | /i/★ | /ɛ/★ | /e/★[j] | /ɔi/ | /o/ | — | /ʉ/★[k] | /jʉ/[l][m] | — | /ɔ/[n] | — | /ʌʉ/★ | /ɪ/ | /a/★ | /ʌ/[k] | ||||||
Wells' lexical sets |
PRICE | FLEECE, NEAR | DRESS, NURSE (part)[o] |
FACE, happY, SQUARE | CHOICE | GOAT, FORCE | — | FOOT, GOOSE, CURE | — | THOUGHT, LOT, CLOTH, NORTH | — | MOUTH | KIT, NURSE (part)[o] |
TRAP, PALM, BATH, START | STRUT, NURSE (part)[o] | |||||||
Example words | bite, shire | beet, sheer | beat, shear | breath, head | bet, fern | bate, race | bait, raise | bay, ray | boil, join | boy, joy | boat, four | (aboot, mooth) | bush, boot, poor | beauty, pure | (dee, lee) | bought, flaw | bot, for | (nout, owre) | about, mouth | bit, fir | bat, farm | butt, fur |
★ = Vowels that definitively follow the Scottish Vowel Length Rule.
- ^ Vowel 3 remains a distinct phoneme /ei/ only in some North Northern Scots varieties,[4][5] generally merging with /i/ or /e/ in other Modern Scots varieties.[5]
- ^ In most Central and Southern Scots varieties vowel 8 /eː/ merges with vowel 4 /e/. Some other varieties distinguish between the two at least partially.[6] In Ulster Scots the realisation may be [ɛː].[7] In non-rhotic Geordie, they are distinguished by quality; FACE is [eː], [ɪə] or [eɪ], whereas SQUARE is [ɛː], distinguished from DRESS by length.[2] The vowels are not phonemically distinct in Scottish English, which is a rhotic variety.
- ^ Stem-final /ʉ/, is diphthongised to /ʌʉ/ in Southern Scots.[8]
- ^ Most Central Scots varieties merge /ø/ with /e/ in long environments and with /ɪ/ in short environments, but most Northern Scots varieties merge /ø/ with /i/.[9] /ø/ generally remains [ø], sometimes [y] in short environments, in the conservative dialects of Scots spoken in parts of Perthshire and Angus, Berwickshire, Roxburghshire, East Dumfrieshire, Orkney and Shetland.[10] Before /k/ and /x/ /ø/ is often realised [(j)ʉ] or [(j)ʌ] depending on dialect.[11]
- ^ Stem-final /iː/ is diphthongised to [əi] or [ei] in Southern Scots.[8]
- ^ /ɔ/ (vowel 18) may merge with /o/ (vowel 5) in Central and Southern Scots varieties.[12]
- ^ /ʌʉ/ may be merged with /o/ before /k/ in many Modern Scots varieties.
- ^ In some eastern and Southern Scots varieties /ɪ/ approaches /ɛ/ in quality. Whether this results in a phonemic merger needs to be further researched.[13]
- ^ In some Modern Scots varieties /a/ may merge with /ɔː/ in long environments.[14] (see below)
- ^ The final vowel in happY is best identified as an unstressed allophone of FACE for most speakers of Scottish English and Ulster English: /ˈhape/. In Geordie, it is best identified as an unstressed allophone of FLEECE: /ˈhapiː/.[15]
- ^ a b /ʉ/ corresponds to two phonemes in Geordie (as in most other English accents): /uː/ GOOSE versus /ʊ/ FOOT; however, this /ʊ/ is not distinguished from /ʌ/, those vowels having never historically split in Geordie. In other words, the two relevant phonemes in all Scottish and Ulster varieties are FOOT/GOOSE versus STRUT, whereas in Geordie the two are FOOT/STRUT versus +GOOSE.[2]
- ^ In English, /jʉ/ is normally regarded as a consonant+vowel sequence, rather than a diphthong. In this article, it is analysed as a diphthong, following Aitken.
- ^ /j/ merges with the preceding alveolar stop to form a postalveolar affricate in the case of yod-coalescence. Tune is best analysed as /tʃʉn/ for many speakers of Scottish English.
- ^ Vowel 12 /ɔː/ is typically distinguished from vowel 18 /ɔ/ in Scots but not in Scottish English, which features the cot-caught merger. Furthermore, this merged vowel may be invariably long in all environments, for some dialects. In Geordie, the vowels are distinct as /ɔː/ for THOUGHT/NORTH and /ɒ/ for LOT/CLOTH.[2] They are normally distinct in Ulster English as well, where CLOTH has a long vowel /ɔː/.
- ^ a b c Wells' lexical set NURSE corresponds to three separate Scottish phoneme sequences: /ɛr/, /ɪr/ and /ʌr/ (as in fern, fir and fur respectively), as Scots and Scottish English have not undergone the NURSE mergers found most other dialects of English.[16]
Rule specifics and exceptions
[edit]The Scottish Vowel Length Rule affects all vowels except the always-short vowels 15 and 19 (/ɪ/ and /ʌ/) and, in many Modern Scots varieties, the always-long Scots-only vowels 8, 11, and 12 (here transcribed as /eː/, /iː/ and /ɔː/) that do not occur as phonemes separate from /e, i, ɔ/ in Scottish Standard English.[17] The further north a Scots dialect is from central Scotland, the more it will contain specific words that do not adhere to the rule.[18]
- Vowel 8a, which only occurs stem-finally, and vowel 10 are always short;[5] therefore, vowel 1 in its short form (according to the Rule), vowel 8a, and vowel 10 all merge as the diphthong /əi/. In its long form, the quality of vowel 1 changes, so it is here transcribed as /ai/ to reflect that.[19]
- /ɪ/ and /ʌ/ (vowels 15 and 19) are usually short in all environments.
- In some Modern Scots varieties /a/ may merge with /ɔː/ in long environments.[14] In Ulster Scots /ɛ/, /a/ and /ɔ/ are usually always long and the [əʉ] realisation of /ʌʉ/ is short before a voiceless consonant or before a sonorant followed by a voiceless consonant but long elsewhere.[20]
- /i/, /e/, /o/, /ʉ/, /ø/, /ʌʉ/, and /jʉ/,(vowels 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 13, and 14) are usually long in the following environments and short elsewhere:[19]
- In stressed syllables before voiced fricatives, namely /v, ð, z, ʒ/, and also before /r/.[17] So in Scottish English, for example, save [seːv], doze [doːz], teethe [tiːð] and confusion [kənˈfjʉːʒən] have longer vowels than safe [sef], dose [dos], teeth [tiθ] and Confucian [kənˈfjʉʃən].
- In some Modern Scots varieties, also before the monomorphemic end-stresses syllables /rd/, /r/ + any voiced consonant, /ɡ/ and /dʒ/.[21]
- In Shetland dialect the [d] realisation of underlying /ð/, usual in other Scots varieties, remains a long environment.[22]
- Before another vowel[23] and
- Before a morpheme boundary[17] so, for example, "stayed" [steːd] is pronounced with a longer vowel than "staid" [sted].
- In stressed syllables before voiced fricatives, namely /v, ð, z, ʒ/, and also before /r/.[17] So in Scottish English, for example, save [seːv], doze [doːz], teethe [tiːð] and confusion [kənˈfjʉːʒən] have longer vowels than safe [sef], dose [dos], teeth [tiθ] and Confucian [kənˈfjʉʃən].
- /ɔː/ (vowel 12) usually occurs in all environments in final stressed syllables.[14][clarification needed]
History
[edit]The Scottish Vowel Length Rule is assumed to have come into being between the early Middle Scots and late Middle Scots periods.[24]
References
[edit]- ^ Harris J. (1985) Phonological Variation and Change: Studies in Hiberno English, Cambridge. p. 14
- ^ a b c d Watt, Dominic; Allen, William (2003), "Tyneside English", Journal of the International Phonetic Association, 33 (2): 267–271, doi:10.1017/S0025100303001397
- ^ Aitken A.J. (1984) 'Scottish Accents and Dialects' in 'Language in the British Isles' Trudgill, P. (ed). pp. 94-98.
- ^ Scottish National Dictionary, Introduction p. xxxvi Archived 17 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b c A History of Scots to 1700, pp. xcviii
- ^ Aitken A.J. (1981) 'The Scottish Vowel-Length Rule' in 'So meny People Longages and Tonges' Benskin, M. and Samuels M.S. (eds). p. 151.
- ^ Johnston P. Regional Variation in Jones C. (1997) The Edinburgh History of the Scots Language, Edinburg University Press, p. 465.
- ^ a b Introduction. p. xxx. Archived from the original on 19 August 2014.
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ignored (help) - ^ Aitken A.J. (1984) 'Scottish Accents and Dialects' in 'Language in the British Isles' Trudgill, P. (ed). p. 99.
- ^ Aitken A.J. (1981) 'The Scottish Vowel-Length Rule' in 'So meny People Longages and Tonges' Benskin, M. and Samuels M.S. (eds). p. 144-145.
- ^ Scottish National Dictionary, Introduction p. xix
- ^ Aitken A.J. (1981) 'The Scottish Vowel-Length Rule' in 'So meny People Longages and Tonges' Benskin, M. and Samuels M.S. (eds). p. 152.
- ^ Aitken A.J. (1984) 'Scottish Accents and Dialects' in 'Language in the British Isles' Trudgill, P. (ed). p. 101.
- ^ a b c Aitken A.J. (1981) 'The Scottish Vowel-Length Rule' in 'So meny People Longages and Tonges' Benskin, M. and Samuels M.S. (eds). p. 150.
- ^ Wells, John C. (1982), Accents of English, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-22919-7, (vol. 1)
- ^ Wells, John C. (1982), Accents of English, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 138, 199–200, ISBN 0-521-22919-7, (vol. 1)
- ^ a b c Aitken A.J. (1984) 'Scottish Accents and Dialects' in 'Language in the British Isles' Trudgill, P. (ed). p. 98.
- ^ Coll Millar. 2007. Northern and Insular Scots. Edinburgh: University Press Ltd. p. 20
- ^ a b A.J. Aitken in The Oxford Companion to the English Language, Oxford University Press 1992. p. 894
- ^ Harris J. (1984) English in the north of Ireland in Trudgill P., Language in the British Isles, Cambridge p. 120
- ^ Aitken A.J. (1981) 'The Scottish Vowel-Length Rule' in 'So meny People Longages and Tonges' Benskin, M. and Samuels M.S. (eds). p. 147.
- ^ Aitken A.J. (1981) 'The Scottish Vowel-Length Rule' in 'So meny People Longages and Tonges' Benskin, M. and Samuels M.S. (eds). p. 141.
- ^ A.J. Aitken in The Oxford Companion to the English Language, Oxford University Press 1992. p. 910
- ^ Aitken A.J. (1981) 'The Scottish Vowel-Length Rule' in 'So meny People Longages and Tonges' Benskin, M. and Samuels M.S. (eds). p. 137.