Great Vowel Shift
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- Harvard's Geoffrey Chaucer Website - The Great Vowel Shift
- University of Pennsylvania - School of Arts and Sciences - Some English words illustrating the Great Vowel Shift
- Academia - The Rise and the Fall of the Great Vowel Shift? The Changing Ideological Intersections of Philology, Historical Linguistics, and Literary History
- The University of Chicago - Department of Computer Science - Vowel shifts in English
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Great Vowel Shift, in historical linguistics, a series of significant and parallel changes in the articulation of English long vowels (i.e., vowels whose articulations are stressed and relatively longer than those of other vowels), extending from approximately the 15th to the 18th century and marking a major phonological distinction between Middle English and Early Modern English. The Great Vowel Shift has generally been characterized as a chain of causally related upward shifts in the vertical position of the tongue—from low to middle and from middle to high—during the articulation of long vowels, which resulted in systematic changes in the vowels’ phonetic qualities. Vowels that were articulated in Middle English with the tongue in high position were diphthongized (transformed into diphthongs, or gliding vowel combinations) while the tongue’s horizontal position within the mouth—back, centre, or front—generally did not change. The Great Vowel Shift was first identified by the Danish historical linguist Otto Jespersen (1860–1943), who also coined the term.
The long vowel associated with the Middle English word sheep, for example, was articulated with the tongue in the middle-front position and was thus similar to the vowel sound of the Modern English word shape, represented in the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) as /e:/. Through the Great Vowel Shift, the tongue moved to the middle-high position in the vowel’s articulation, rendering it similar to the vowel sound of the modern word beet, represented in the IPA as /i:/. The Middle English high-front vowel /i:/ and high-back vowel /u:/ (as in the Modern English word fool) were diphthongized to /ai/ (as in bide) and /au/ (as in house), respectively. According to most accounts, that shift left “open” the high-front and high-back positions, which were then filled by the formerly middle-front and middle-back vowels /e:/ and /o:/ (as in boat). The remaining vowel shifts followed a similar pattern.
Although the phonetic changes constituting the Great Vowel Shift have been studied in great detail, their exact causes are unknown.