Palatal consonants in the Mennonite dialect Plautdietch in the light of the development typology of the Ingvaeonic consonantism
Loading...
Files
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
St Petersburg State University
Abstract
The paper deals with the system of palatal consonants: /t’/, /d’/, /n’/ in Low German,
Prussian dialects of the Mennonites. This dialect was used in the “language islands”
of the Ukraine and of several other regions of the Russian state and is today
common in the Mennonite communities all around the world: Canada, USA, South
America, Germany, Siberia and the Altai region. The research is based on the recent
records of these dialects as well as on the data from the dialectal archive of Viktor
Schirmunski (Žirmunskij) in St Petersburg. The rendering of the palatal consonants
in the questionnaires in this archive by the dialect speakers in 1920s is examined. The
palatalization of consonants in Plautdietch is considered from the background of the
palatalizations and assibilations in the Ingvaeonic branch of West Germanic languages.
It is emphasized that the palatalization is one of the characteristic phenomena of the
Ingvaeonic languages, which can manifest itself in different periods of their history.
Thus the development of the palatal consonants can be considered in the framework
of genetically related languages’ typology. It is known that the palatalization of [k] and
[g] occurred in Old English before and after front vowels. In Frisian, palatalization was
followed by assibilation. In Dutch, palatalization is observed in the diminutive suffix.
Palatalization in a number of Low German dialects occurred as well and was followed
by zetacism. Thus the palatalizaion reflects internal trends in the development of the
dialects of some West Germanic languages, namely those of the Ingvaeonic group. It
is probably an intermediate stage preceding assibilation and affrication of consonants. In some cases it remains in the modern language in its initial state, as is the case in the
Mennonite dialect of the Plautdietch.
Description
Citation
Naiditch L. Palatal consonants in the Mennonite dialect Plautdietch in the light of the development typology of the Ingvaeonic consonantism. Scandinavian Philology, 2022, vol. 20, issue 2, pp. 245–268.