Lecture 3 Linguistic Features of the Germanic Languages Phonetic Features



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lecture 3


Lecture 3 Linguistic Features of the Germanic Languages Phonetic Features
All the Germanic Languages of the past and present have common linguistic features that are not shared by other groups of languages in the Indo-European family (Slavonic group, Romance group, etc.). These features are characteristic of the Germanic group only. They appeared during the period of the Proto-Germanic Language, before it split into a certain number of the Germanic languages. First of all we are going to discuss the common Germanic phonetic features.
Word Stress/Accent

Indo-European (Non-Germanic)

Proto-Germanic

1. free stress (movable, i.e. can appear in any part of a word (root, prefix, suffix));

1. fixed stress (can’t move either in form- or word-building and is usually placed on root or prefix);

2. pitch stress (musical)

2. dynamic stress (force, breath stress)

E.g.: русский

E.g.: German

English

б`елый

`Liebe

`white

белизн`а

`lieben

`whiteness

белов`атый

`lieberhaft

`whitish

бел`ить

ge`liebt

`whitewash

It is supposed that originally stress in Germanic languages had been free, that is, in
different words different syllables could be stressed. In the earliest Germanic texts we find a
system of fixed stress (on the first syllable). It was the result of a change of the original free-stress system, which was superseded by a fixed-stress system.
The Proto-Germanic type of stress led to the formation of the following peculiarities of the Germanic languages as compared to non-Germanic Indo-European languages:

  • phonetic– as a result of the fixed position of the stress the unstressed syllables were becoming weaker and weaker, they got less distinct and neutral sounds (such as “schwa”) appeared;

  • morphological – as a result of the fact that the stress was fixed on the root and the syllables following the root were always unstressed and weak, many Germanic languages began to lose suffixes and grammatical endings and became ANALYTICAL LANGUAGES.

E.g.: Old English (OE) [`sunu]
Middle English (ME) [`sunə]
New English (NE) [`sun]
Modern English (ModE) [`sΛn] (the word “son”)

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