English Language & Usage Asked on September 29, 2021
I’ve noticed this phenomenon / process in many words where a diphthong (or a long vowel as well?) reduces to a short vowel when it’s inflected.
Consider the following examples:
Pronounce /prəˈnaʊns/ → pronunciation /prəˌnʌn.siˈeɪ.ʃən/
Wise /waɪz/ → wizard /ˈwɪz.əd/
Know /nəʊ/ → knowledge /ˈnɒl.ɪdʒ/
Finite /ˈfaɪ.naɪt/ → infinite /ˈɪn.fɪ.nət/
Nature /ˈneɪ.tʃə(r)/ → natural /ˈnætʃ.ər.əl/
In all the above examples, a diphthongs changes to a short vowel when it’s inflected.
I searched a lot (shortening/ reduction of vowels to diphthongs etc.) but I did not find any useful information.
Questions:
There are indeed five diphthongs/long vowels that reduce to a short vowels in some inflections of words. This is a consequence of the Great Vowel Shift: originally, in Middle English, the vowels /aɪ/ and /ɪ/ were simply the long and short versions of the same vowel: /iː/ and /i/ (so crime was pronounced something like we pronounce cream today). The Great Vowel Shift changed all the long vowels substantially, and left the short ones more or less the same.
The five pairs are:
diphthong /aɪ/ to short vowel /ɪ/ (crime, criminal),
diphthong /aʊ/ to short vowel /ʌ/ (foundation, fundamental),
diphthong /eɪ/ to short vowel /æ/ (nation, national),
diphthong /əʊ/ to short vowel /ɒ/ (code, codify),
long vowel /iː/ to short vowel /ɛ/ (brief, brevity).
John Well's Phonetic Blog mentions this in a discussion of why English spelling is so difficult:
Then came major sound changes, notably the Great Vowel Shift, which left us with sets of related words in which the common element is still spelt identically but nowadays pronounced very differently, and in which medieval scribes and printers opted to follow the sense rather than the sound: crime — criminal, type — typical, cave — cavity and so on.
Does this affect all inflected words? No, there are numerous exceptions, like proud, pride, where the vowels are different not because of the Great Vowel Shift, but because they were different in Old English; and scene, scenic, scenery, where the vowel doesn't change with inflections, even though it changes in similar words (zeal, zealot, zealotry). The vowel /iː/ may be conserved in scenic, scenery because the inflected forms date to after the Great Vowel Shift.
Correct answer by Peter Shor on September 29, 2021
As explained in Peter Shor's answer, Middle English had five sets of long and short vowels. Both the long and short vowels had almost the same vowel quality; the difference was only length i.e. the long vowels were simply long.
In certain environments, especially before two or more unstressed syllables, the long vowels became shortened. For example, as Peter Shor said, crime was pronounced /ˈkriːm(ə)/ and criminal /ˈkriːminəl/: the /iː/ in criminal became /i/ because it was followed by two more syllables. Later on, the Great Vowel Shift changed the vowel qualities of almost all the long vowels, so the /iː/ of crime became /aɪ/.
This process of shortening is called Trisyllabic Laxing and according to Trask's Historical Linguisitcs: ‘At one time, this rule applied to all relevant cases; it was therefore purely a phonological rule, a constraint upon what was pronounceable in English’. Later on, it ceased to be a part of English phonology, however, its remnants can still be found in Modern English:
In some cases such as pronounce/pronunciation, announce/annunciation, profound/profundity, it also changed the spelling. The south/southern idiosyncrasy is also because of TSL: southern was a three-syllable word (/ˈsuːðərnə/) when TSL applied, the terminal 'ə' was later on lost and gave us /ˈsʌðən/.
Although there are so many exceptions such as words ending in -ness (mindfulness, loneliness etc) and later borrowings such as obese/obesity [Wikipedia]. In privacy, TSL applies in BrE, but not in AmE, nightingale,
Most of the transcriptions in this answer are from Cambridge Dictionary
Answered by Decapitated Soul on September 29, 2021
The question has already been answered by Peter Shor and Decapitated Soul, but I just wanted to point out that this phenomenon is slightly related to the isochrony of the English language.
See Why are the vowels in Christ and Christmas different? (and other strange diphthong behaviour)
Note that Christ/Christmas or wise/wizard are not examples of Trisyllabic laxing but the phenomenon still happens, which just goes to show that the phenomenon (that, as pointed out by Peter Shor, has its root in the Great Vowel Shift) is more general and related to the isochronic prosody.
Answered by Damaru on September 29, 2021
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