SHORTENING OF THE LONG CONSONANTS IN DANISH AND WEST GERMANIC LANGUAGES
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
The original Common Germanic long consonants as well as the long consonants
developed in different Old Germanic languages were shortened in the Middle
Germanic period (12th–16th c.). Due to inconsistency of Old and Middle Germanic
orthography one has to rely on modern data in order to answer the question about
the history of long consonants. Modern Danish and the West Germanic languages are
characterised by a correlation of syllable cut (or syllable contact) with short vowels
only in closed syllables. In words with close contact (CVC, CVCV(C)) the morpheme
final consonant cannot be separated by syllable boundary from the preceding root
vowel (Dan. falde /falǝ/, Ger. fallen /falǝn/, Dut. vallen /falǝ/). The morpheme final
consonants do not have any syllable initial features. At the previous stage of these
languages, which remains in Scandinavian languages (exept Danish) and in some High
German and Frisian dialects, the second part of a long consonant has a clear syllable
initial character, cf. Shw. falla /fal-la/. The shortening of the long consonants in Danish
and in the West Germanic languages is explained in the article within the framework
of Mel’nikov’s hypothesis about language as a self-adjusting system, with the possibility
to rebuild the system in accordance with a certain task. Thus, the long consonants in
the Danish and West Germanic language have lost their morpheme final and syllable
initial part in order to provide the coincidence of syllable and morpheme boundaries
in close contact words. Close contact is a very productive syllable type in modern
Germanic languages (especially in English and Danish) and a lot of original open
contact words have changed to that type of contact. This development together with
some other changes (increasing difference between syllable (and morpheme) initials
and finals and the development of tones) has led to increasing similarity between the
Germanic languages with the correlation of syllable cut and the syllabic languages of
South-East Asia.
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Citation
Kuzmenko Yu. K. Shortening of the long consonants in Danish and west Germanic languages. Scandinavian Philology, 2017, vol. 15, issue 2, pp. 223–247.