Much like the way we have a symbol for and, we also once had a similar situation with that (or, in Old English, þæ t), which was a letter thorn with a stroke at the top. Originally an Irish letter, it was used for sounds like "zhyah," "jhah," and "gah." But with the arrival of the more familiar shape of the Carolingian G, that took over the "g" sound.Īs Old English transformed into Middle English, insular g turned into yogh and, as mentioned earlier, was slowly replaced in large part with the now-standard GH by scribes, at which point insular g/yogh were no longer needed and the Carolingian G stood alone (though a descendant can still be seen in modern Ireland). This letter (referred to as insular G or Irish G) is sort of the grandfather of the Middle English version of yogh. Júlio Reis, Wikimedia Commons // Public Domain So you’d have “w, x, y, z, and, per se, and.” Over time, the last bit morphed into ampersand, and it stuck even after we quit teaching it as part of the alphabet. However, when teaching children the alphabet, the & was often placed at the end, after Z, and recited as “and per se and,” meaning “ and in and of itself” or “ and standing on its own” (& wasn’t entirely unique for this-people also used to say "A per se A," "I per se I," and "O per se O," especially when spelling out words to signify that those letters were functioning as words in their own right). Originally, the character was simply called and or sometimes et (from the Latin word for and, which the ampersand is usually stylistically meant to resemble). In fact, it’s because of its placement in the alphabet that it gets its name. Today we just use it for stylistic purposes, but the ampersand has had a long and storied history in English, and was actually frequently included as a 27th letter of the alphabet as recently as the 19th century. Eventually both thorn and eth were replaced by TH, though thorn managed to stick around a little longer. According to British linguist David Crystal, a general lack of Old English manuscripts makes it difficult to determine why a thorn or an eth might be used in a particular manuscript, but it could be because there was a difference in the scribe’s accent, the variations were fun, the scribe thought one looked better or was easier to write, or maybe they just didn’t notice. Originating from Irish, today it represents a slightly different pronunciation of the “th” sound than is usually associated with thorn, with eth being the “th” sound in the words this or there and thorn being the “th” sound in the word thorn.īut all evidence suggests that this pronunciation difference didn’t exist in Old English-they were often used interchangeably, even within the same manuscript. 1234qwer1234qwer4, Wikimedia Commons // CC BY-SA 4.0Įth is kind of like the little brother to thorn. The upper and lowercase versions of the letter eth. Over the centuries, this meant that people began mispronouncing names-even today the first name of the UK politician Menzies Campbell is pronounced “MING-iss” rather than “Men-zees," though some Menzies do pronounce it with a Z. The yogh held on in Scotland, where its shape began to resemble a cursive Z-so when printing presses arrived, Scottish printers just replaced the missing yoghs with readily available Zs. It wasn’t a smooth process- according to linguistics professor Kate Burridge, “in the 1600s the word daughter was pronounced three ways: ‘dauter’, ‘dauchter’ and ‘daufter.’” Then, these new GH letters, through various linguistic processes, split into some of the wide range of sounds associated with "gh" today (though not all-the GH you see in ghost is thought to be from Dutch printers, for instance). According to English scholar Dennis Freeborn’s From Old English to Standard English, in just the Middle English poem Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, it could stand for the “y” sound in yet, the “ch” sound in German Bach or Scottish loch, and many more.īut as the years went on, scholars started replacing all the instances of yogh with Y, G, or GH in their texts. Yogh represented quite a few sounds in Middle English. The upper and lowercase versions of the letter Yogh.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |