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Why doesn’t that rhyme with that?
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And why doesn’t that rhyme with that?
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English spelling is apparently chaos with the same
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clusters of letters making different
sounds depending on where you look.
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But there are reasons for all of it
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and one single bizarre phenomenon
plays a bigger part than any other.
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Let’s get to the bottom of it in another RobWords.
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So why is English so messed up that we can spell
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lots of different sounds
in lots of different ways?
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Well if we’re going to look - of should that
be lewk - for the single biggest reason,
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then we need look no further
than The Great Vowel Shift.
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The Great Vowel Shift is the reason why “look”
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doesn’t rhyme with “spook” and
“great” doesn’t rhyme with “beat”.
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It’s to blame for a lot of things.
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The term Great Vowel Shift was coined by a
Danish linguist called Otto Jespersen who
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showed an enviable level of maturity by
not calling it the Great Vowel Movement
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and it refers to a centuries-long
process that saw the pronunciation
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of the so-called long vowels
in English change completely.
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The GVS - as all the hippest
linguists call it - took ages
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from as early as the 15th century to
arguably as late as the 18th century.
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So that’s the end of the Middle English
period - the English of Chaucer - and
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through the period of Early Modern
English, the English of Shakespeare.
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As well as taking ages, it also
played out in several stages.
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But nevertheless, the Great
Vowel Shift gets treated as
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a single phenomenon - the great
vowel shift, rather than shifts -
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because all of the changes can be
seen as part of a chain reaction,
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with each vowel sound
changing in a predictable way.
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Let me try and explain this with the
help of this handy diagram of a mouth.
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It doesn’t look like a mouth at the moment,
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but just let me add a few things
to help with the visualisation.
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So this is the chart that linguists
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use to describe where in the mouth the many
different vowel sounds we make are produced.
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You can find it online with sounds and clicking
around on it definitely isn’t hilarious.
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[Website sounds] Ooh, err, uh, ay, orr
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Anyway let’s simplify all that and just plot on
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the vowel sounds affected
by the Great Vowel Shift.
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Now don’t stress about what
these phonetic symbols mean
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like what the heck is that?
and what does that one mean?
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It’s not that important. The reason I’m
showing you this is to show how uniformly
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the vowel sounds in words change during the
Great Vowel Shift, because there’s a pattern.
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Words that contain any of these vowels at the
start of the Great Vowel Shift end the Great Vowel
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Shift with a vowel sound that is produced higher
up and sometimes further forward in the mouth.
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So words that were pronounced with an
“ehh” start to be pronounced with an
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“ayy”. Or words that were pronounced with
an “ohh” were pronounced with an “ooh”.
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The only exceptions are the sounds that
were already at the top of the mouth,
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which move towards the
centre and become diphthongs.
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But again, ignore the phonetics jargon.
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All you need to take away from this is that
there is a consistent direction of travel
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that vowel sounds are moving in and that’s
why the Great Vowel Shift is seen as this
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single phenomenon despite taking several
hundreds of years and happening in stages.
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But let’s get to the meat of this and talk about
how specific words changed as a result of it all.
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Well “meat” is actually a great example.
It enters the Great Vowel Shift with its
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Middle English pronunciation mairt, part-way
through its pronunciation becomes more like
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“mate” and by the end it’s pronounced
much more like we say it now: meat.
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And by the way, we pronounced another
word like that, don’t we? Meet.
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And it’s during one of the stages
of the Great Vowel Shift that the
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pronunciations of these two
words unhelpfully converge.
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So you see how spelling is getting
messed up here? Because at the same
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time the pronunciations of see and sea
become the same. So do piece and peace.
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And that’s because some words go through more
stages than others, leaving other words that
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are spelt the same behind and converging
with words that are spelt differently.
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EA words are the best example of this. Just think
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about the different sounds those
two letters can make together.
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They make one sound in beat,
but a different one in bear.
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And another one in break. And another in bread.
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And the reasons why these
EA sounds are different is
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partially down to the sounds that come after them.
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You can see this in the fact that break and steak
rhyme, because they both have the K after the EA.
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That appears to have played a part in how their
pronunciation changed during the vowel shift.
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The same goes for bear rhyming with wear
and tear, because they all share that rrr.
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Grrr.
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By the way, the fact that these four letters can
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also be pronounced teer shows just
how messed up this whole thing is.
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…and also why the consonant
sounds don’t explain anything.
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Just look at this quote from Geoffrey Chaucer,
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who was writing before the Great Vowel Shift,
or at least only in the early stages of it.
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We can learn so much about how vowel
sounds changed just by looking at
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the words that so far as he was concerned, rhymed.
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In his London dialect, anyway.
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So to Chaucer the words breath and heath
rhymed. They were “brayth” and “hayth”.
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But they don’t to us anymore.
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And that’s because heath went through the
normal changes we’d expect from the Great
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Vowel Shift. But breath shortened
like vowel sounds in head and dead.
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Double O words also behaved inconsistently during
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the Great Vowel Shift. Hence my
earlier point about look and spook.
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But you also end up with another sound in blood.
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Let’s look at a few more words
that changed during this period.
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Well one word that had an interesting voyage
through the Great Vowel Shift is the word boat,
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which is pronounced bort - like the modern German
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word for boat is now - at the
start of the great vowel shift
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but more like it is now by the end.
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And actually folk is pronounced more like
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the German word Volk before
its vowel sound shifts too.
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And In Middle English, the word bite is
pronounced more like beet. In Early Modern
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English - so during the shift - it morphs into
bate, and by the present day it becomes bite.
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Right? So these differences are big aren’t they?
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The way people were speaking changed dramatically.
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Chaucer and Shakespeare would have had an awful
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lot of trouble understanding
one another as a result.
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So whee oh whee… sorry, why
oh why, did all this happen?
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Well, that’s a very difficult question
with a lot of very interesting answers.
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The most grim among them is that it
was triggered by this: the Black Death.
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The violent plague that struck much
of Europe - including England - in
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the middle of the 14th century
forced people to move around.
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In the wake of the plague they
flocked to devastated cities
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like London to take advantage of higher
wages caused by new shortages of people.
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So people with different dialects started to mix
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and probably influence one
another’s ways of speaking.
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Among those to flood into England’s
cities were also migrants from abroad,
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whose accents may also have
influenced local dialects.
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Now, this is a good time to mention the French,
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because they may also have played
a role in the Great Vowel Shift.
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Over the centuries during
which the shift took place,
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the French went from basically running
England to being its sworn enemies.
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And some linguists have suggested that attempts to
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sound either more or less French may
have driven some of the vowel changes.
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That’s interesting isn’t it, because that suggests
that the Great Vowel Shift was somehow conscious
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and that leads us to another possible
contributing factor: fashion.
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It’s possible that people were changing the ways
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they spoke to sound either more
prestigious or more fashionable.
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Fascinating stuff, right?
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And then, there’s another major development
in not just the history of England, but the
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history of language all over the world,
that almost certainly played its part.
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The invention of the printing press.
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Suddenly, people can get
books. Literacy increases,
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and people are seeing words
written down for the first time.
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As a result they’re changing the way
they speak to match the spellings.
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That’s an amazing idea right?
And it’s one we can relate to.
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You know, it’s not so long ago that forehead was
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more commonly pronounced forrud and
arctic was often pronounced artic.
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In fact, you can still hear
both but those pronunciations,
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but the pronunciations closer to the
spellings have ultimately won out.
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Anyway, we need to do a bit more
finger pointing at the printing press,
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because many of the spelling problems we’ve
talked about are ultimately its fault.
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The arrival of the printing
press leads to a certain
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level of standardization of English spelling.
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Dictionaries start to be written which help
to fix how certain words should be written.
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But all of this is happening in
the middle of the flippin’ vowel
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shift meaning that spellings
are getting fixed mid-change.
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As I explained in a video ages ago: the fact
we have about a dozen ways of pronouncing
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ough is partly down to the words having
their spellings fixed at different times,
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or at times when they were pronounced the same.
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So we’ve got the Black Death, immigration,
fashion and the printing press:
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just some of the probable explanations for the
cause and continuation of the Great Vowel Shift.
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But as I said up top, the
shift was a chain of events,
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where one change happens and that causes the next.
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So it’s the cause of that first
change that we really need to find,
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and that has so far proven illusive.
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By the way, it’s important to point out that
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the Great Vowel Shift didn’t
happen the same everywhere.
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These changes are primarily happening in the
area around London and the English Midlands,
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the dialects of which do become the
dominant form of British English.
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But different areas were affected
to lesser or greater extents by the
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shift and that’s apparent in accent
variations across England today.
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For example, Northern dialects didn’t
see the change in the pronunciation of
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the word “but” that gave us “but”
in the southern English accents.
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Where I come from we still say
“butt”. And catch the bus to Lundun.
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And you don’t just see - or hear -
the evidence of variations in England.
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In Canada it’s there in the way
people say “aboat” instead of “about”.
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Which reminds me: the end of the
Great Vowel Shift doesn’t leave
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all the vowel sounds in British English the
way they are now. They continue to develop.
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But in the meantime, the English language
crosses the Atlantic and an American English
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starts to develop, free of the further
changes that happen in Southern England.
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That’s why American English,
like Northern English,
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doesn’t have that long vowel
sound in bath and grass and dance.
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However North American English makes up for it
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by incorporating a similar vowel sound
into words like not and caught and hot.
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Okay, we’ve covered the GVS and its aftermath,
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but the death of English spelling isn’t
just a case of “Murder most vowel”.
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[jaunty song] “Rob did a joke there”
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“Wasn’t it fun?”
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“It was a pun on Murder Most Foul.”
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Consonant changes also characterise
the shift from Middle English to
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Early Modern English and wreak havoc
with the ways we write things down.
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I touched on one earlier when I mentioned
the different pronunciations of this.
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You see, In a lot of cases the
sound the GH would have represented,
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a sort of ghh sound, either disappears
completely or turns into an F sound.
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So we say throo instead of through and
site rather than sicht and coff instead
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of cough and ruff instead of rough.
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It’s during the Early Modern English
period that certain Ls become silent,
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like in folk, but also in almond and palm.
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Now if you’re thinking “but I do
pronounce those Ls” that’s because
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your dialect either didn’t drop them or
has reinstated them based on the spelling.
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Annoyingly, at around the same time, some Ls were
put into words that never previously had them too.
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For example, fault never had an L
until some know-all scholar popped
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one in to show off the word’s Latin heritage.
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They did the same with the C in perfect
and also the silent letters in words like
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debt and receipt, but we didn’t
start to pronounce those ones.
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Early Modern English also sees the T
sound disappear from castle and hasten,
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as well as the D sound in handsome and landscape.
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Although the D in landscape is definitely
back and I guess some people maybe
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pronounce handsome in hands-ome -
again, influenced by the spelling.
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The T in often is another good case of
this. Queen Elizabeth the first supposedly
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pronounced it offen, but as early as the
17th century, the T was being pronounced
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again by some people who’d spotted it in the
spelling and also in its relation to oft.
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Now lots of people say of-ten and it’s absolutely
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fine. I fact I think a lot
of the time I say of-ten.
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Interestingly though: no one says sof-ten.
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And just one more change that
really messes up our spelling.
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Around the 17th century Ks and Gs start to
fall silent in words like knight and gnome,
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having previously been pronounced.
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Linguists think this is probably just
because nee is easier to say than k-nee.
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Ni! Ni. Ni.
We humans do tend towards the lazy.
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And on that broad philosophical
point… there we have it.
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To sum up: English spelling has suffered from the
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fact that pronunciation went through radical
changes - to both vowels and consonants - at
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precisely the time when we’re trying
to nail down the language on paper.
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As a result, many spellings are
a snapshot of a moment in English
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history when a word was pronounced
rather differently to it is today.
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Thanks Great Vowel Movement.
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You’ve really helped us oot.
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If you’ve enjoyed this video check,
you should watch this one here next.
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And also check out my new podcast
Words Unravelled which you can
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watch here or you can listen to
wherever you get your podcasts.
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Words Unravelled.
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Until we mate again… take care.