English sound changes
The order here is something that works and seems to make sense to me, and is not necessarily historically accurate. In particular, after the Aus/RP split, comparable changes are next to each other, even if they didn’t happen at a similar time. This is largely based on Wikipedia’s article on the topic, but reformatted for convenience, sometimes reordered, has some uninteresting stuff cut out, and I think it’s generally more accurate. OTOH, it might also be less accurate.
Contents
Initial vowels:
FRONT:
iː | fleece, meat, near, sErious |
ɪ | kit, fir, spIrIt happY, waitEd |
eː | face, square |
ɛ | dress, shErry |
CENTRAL:
ə | probably less frequent than today |
a | trap, bath, start, cArry |
BACK:
ɑ | lot, cloth, north, pOrridge (Note: unrounded) |
oː | goat, force |
ʊ | strut, nurse, curry, ?foot |
uː | goose, poor, jUry* |
DIPHTHONGS:
əɪ | price, prize |
əʊ | mouth, mouths |
ɑʊ | palm /pɑum/, tall /tɑʊl/, thought, ?dance (words from A-N /ã/ probably usually fit in here, or they may long have alternated between /ɑu/ and /a/) |
ɔi | choice |
- I don’t know if /iu/ was changed yet to /juː/ or if that is a later change, but certainly “sure” /siuɹ/~/sjuːɹ/ and “sugar” /siugəɹ/~/sjuːgəɹ/ took part in early yod-coallesence. If not, the “jury” is /dʒiuɹɪ/ rather than /dʒuːɹɪ/, but it is of little significance.
(Note the distribution of /ɛɹ/ vs /aɹ/ was different from today’s distribution of NURSE with ‹er› and FAR in the standard speech of the day. e.g. “university” /iunivaɹsɪtɪ/ hence “varsity”)
Initial consonants
As PDE, except /ʍ/ is standard, but /ŋ ʒ/ are not.
Changes
Long vowels have shortened inconsistently in many eras, notably /uː/ → /ʌ/ before and after the foot/strut split, and /eː/ → /ɛ/ before the meet/meat merger (hence both meat (e.g. lead) and face (e.g. said).)
Pre-US
- ʊ → ʌ (exceptions after labials & before /l/)
- ng, mb → ŋ, m / _#
- early yod-coallesence:
- tj, sj, dj, zj → tʃ, ʃ, dʒ, ʒ except (?in stressed syllables) before /uː/
- rhotic influence:
- a → ɑː / _ɹ]σ
- ɑ → ɔː / _ɹ]σ
- ɛ, ɪ, ʌ → ɜː / _ɹ]σ
- /ɑʊ/ monophthongisation:
- ɑʊ → ɑː before labials, some nasals (e.g. aunt, dance, laundry)
- ɑʊ → ɔː otherwise
- a large number of cases that were ɑː have become ɔː subsequently for non-phonetic reasons, like laundry.
- a → æ (except in a few words, like “father” when → ɑː)
- Lowering of centre-starting diphthongs (this may have been delayed in happening before some voiceless consonants, hence Canadian Rising and the two allophones in the Scots Vowel Length Rule)
- əɪ → äɪ (in most of Britain)
- əɪ → ɑi (in some parts of South-Eastern England)
- əʊ → äʊ (in most of Britain)
- əʊ → æʊ (in those same parts of South-Eastern England)
- eː, oː → eɪ, oʊ except before /ɹ/
Phonology
FRONT:
iː | fleece, meat, near, sErious |
ɪ | kit, spIrIt happY, waitEd |
eː | face, square |
ɛ | dress, shErry |
CENTRAL:
ə | probably less frequent than today |
ɜː | fir, nurse (only before /ɹ/) |
a | trap, bath, cArry |
BACK:
ɑ | lot, cloth, pOrridge (Note: unrounded) |
ɑː | start, father, palm, |
ʌ | strut, curry |
ɔː | north, tall, thought |
oʊ | goat [goʊt], force [foːɹs] |
ʊ | ?foot |
uː | goose, poor, jUry* |
DIPHTHONGS:
äɪ~ɑɪ | prize [äɪ~ɑɪ], price [äɪ~ɑɪ~əɪ] |
äʊ~æʊ | mouths [äʊ~ɑʊ], mouth [äʊ~ɑʊ~əʊ] |
ɔi | choice |
After American/British split
British | American |
---|---|
Non-rhoticism:
| |
ɑ → ɒ | |
Trap-bath and lot-cloth splits | Lot-cloth split |
æ → æː → aː / _[+fric -voice] or _[+nasal][-voice]; words which change vary between dialects | |
ɒ → ɒː → ɔː / _[+fric -voice] | |
In the /æː/ stage, trap/bath was exported to some parts (e.g. NYC) of America. Other parts (e.g. Boston) received it in the /ɑː/ stage. | |
America generally received the LOT-CLOTH split. | |
Low vowel length-loss (father-bother merger)
| |
ʍ → w | regional in US |
After Australian/British split
Many of the changes marked “Australian” occurred in Britain, but are not a part of RP.
British | Australian | American |
---|---|---|
Development of dark /l/ (This appears to be a shared development, but apparently took place in the 19th century and had different specifics in most dialects.) | ||
l → ɫ / in coda | l → ɫ / _ | l → ɫ / (in some conditions) |
oʊ → əʊ / _ | Breaking
|
|
ɪ → iː / unstressed word-finally and unstressed foot-finally if the next the next syllable is stressed and begins with /k g tʃ dʒ ʃ ʒ/ | ɪ → i / unstressed word-finally | |
ɪ → ə / unstressed syllables | ||
ə → ɪ / _(k, g, tʃ, dʒ, ʃ, ʒ, v) | ||
t → ɾ / V_V[-stress] (ish; probably happened in England and went over with the colonists) | ||
20th Century
|
Early (before yod-loss)
20th Century
Ongoing
|
Earlier:
|
Something |
|
j → ∅ / σ[(s, z, l, θ, n, t, d)_ |
LOT-CLOTH split reversed properly |
|
ɒ → ɔ / _[velar] (partial) |
æ → æː / _(n, m, g, ɫ)]σ unless (j, w) follows; and rarely _d; unless it’s a form of a strong verb. | æ → ɛə / _(n, m) and others depending on dialect |
Stuff that needs to be included
- Jonathan's /nəi̯f/~/nəi̯vz/ thing
- AmE w stuff
- ‹wa?_› /wə?_/ (squash, was, wash)
- ‹war› /[wɔɻ/ (war, ward)
- ‹t(ə)war› /tɔɻ/ (toward) .. same as above?
- ‹[wor› /[wɻ/ (word)
- ‹kwor› /kɔɻ/ (quart, quarter, *quarry)
- ‹swor› /sɔɻ/ (sword, *swore)
- /ə/ in initial pre-vocalic syllable ~ /Ø/ (phonology /ˈfnɑləʤi/, surround /sɻau̯nd/, succomb /skəm/ (~scum??))
- syllabification, especially with cases of hiatus and ɻ