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On Early English Pronunciation, Part V

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

On early English pronunciation: with especial reference to Shakspere [sic] and Chaucer, containing an investigation of the correspondence of writing with speech in England from the Anglosaxon [sic] period to the present day means of the ordinary printing types is an 1889 book by Alexander John Ellis. Since publication, it has been cited continuously by dialectologists of English and Scots, owing to its survey data on the dialects in the 19th century. The author is regularly cited by linguists as "A.J. Ellis" to distinguish him from Stanley Ellis, a prominent dialectologist of the 20th century.

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Transcription

Survey

A.J. Ellis attempted to record the dialect in all areas where English or Scots was habitually spoken. Work began around 1870.[1] The data in England were collected through three tools of investigation:

  1. In 1875, he produced a "comparative specimen", consisting of 15 sentences to be read by informants in order to obtain "dialect renderings of familiar words in various connections and some characteristic constructions"
  2. A classified word list of 971 items, of which numbers 1-712 were "Wessex and Norse" words, numbers 713-808 were "English" and numbers 809-971 were "Romance". This list also included a small number of grammatical constructions and some instructions on how to characterise the intonation of speech. The time that the word list was constructed is not clear, but it seems to have been shortly after the comparative specimen.
  3. In 1879, he created the Dialect Test. This was a passage of 76 words, containing an example of almost all West Saxon phonemes.[2]

In the case of Scotland, most of the data came from a previous survey by JAH Murray, Dialect of the Southern Counties of Scotland, but Orkney and Shetland were surveyed in the same way as England. He rejected printed sources, in favour of direct observation. A.J. Ellis initially expected that his survey would require only 30 pages in his On Early English Pronunciation series, but it eventually took 835 pages.[3]

A.J. Ellis was aware that many speakers were bidialectal and would not speak to him, as an educated man, in the same way that they spoke to their families and friends. He was only interested in the latter speech, which he saw as the real dialect. Anderson noted that A.J. Ellis obtained some material directly from railway porters and domestic servants, and suggested that his decision not to contact other dialect speakers directly was "a characteristic of the age and not just of the man".[4]

Much of A.J. Ellis's data were collected by Thomas Hallam. The concentration of sites across the country was very uneven, with a bias towards those sites that Hallam could reach by train from Manchester.[5] His main job was in the canals department of the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway offices.[4] The two other main fieldworkers were J.G. Goodchild and C.C. Robinson.[6] There were a further 811 voluntary helpers, mostly educated people who did not speak in the dialects that A.J. Ellis was researching; the contributions of these latter helpers has been criticised as a source of error.[5]

In one case, A.J. Ellis noted that the vicarage of Annfield Plain in County Durham could not be reached for the survey because of snow on a hill between the railway station and the vicarage. Anderson cited this as evidence of the difficulties in administering a survey in the days before modern cars and roads.[7]

Palaeotype

A.J. Ellis made an early attempt to write phonetically with his palaeotype. This made use of several symbols not in everyday use in English to illustrate the variety of sounds. The palaeotype was also used by JAH Murray in his work in Scotland.[8] A transcription of the palaeotype to the modern International Phonetic Alphabet was made by Eustace in 1969.[9]

Appraisal

Joseph Wright initially questioned the value of Ellis's dialect tests, given what Ellis had recorded from Wright's home village of Windhill, West Riding of Yorkshire.[10] He later praised the work in English Dialect Grammar, calling it a "monumental work" that had been "invaluable for checking and supplementing my own material".[11] Peter Anderson later said that Wright had done Ellis "a disservice" in his assessment of the Windhill dialect test, as the differences were within the realm of what different linguists would transcribe.[12] Köckeritz wrote that a word-for-word comparison showed that Wright took most of his Suffolk data from A.J. Ellis.[13]

Eugen Dieth, a co-founder of the Survey of English Dialects, referred to the book as "a tragedy" that "every dialectologist consults, but, more often than not, rejects as inaccurate and wrong",[14] and to the palaeotype as "often incomprehensible and defies all reasonable interpretation".[15] This assessment has since been rejected as unfair by linguists such as K.M. Petyt,[11] Graham Shorrocks[16] and Warren Maguire.[17] The other co-founder of the SED, Harold Orton, gave a more favourable assessment than Dieth, describing the work as an "astonishing publication far in advance of anything similar anywhere" but also as "defective and unreliable".[18] Anderson has argued that the results of the SED in Yorkshire map closely on to A.J. Ellis's results, and the few discrepancies can be explained through linguistic changes over time.[19]

Peter Trudgill has praised A.J. Ellis's work as pioneering.[20] In 2004, Trudgill used the data to trace the origins of New Zealand English, using it as an indication for the language spoken at the time that New Zealand was colonised by British settlers.[21]

Gerard Knowles saw A.J. Ellis's work as the first acknowledgement of a Scouse dialect, distinct from the rest of Lancashire, although A.J. Ellis considered Scouse to be "no dialect proper".[22] An article in the Transactions of the Yorkshire Dialect Society noted that A.J. Ellis also excluded Brummie, Mackem and several dialects that showed influence of Irish influence, yet he included Cockney, which had been influenced by waves of immigrants, and the speech of the Isle of Man and Cornwall, which had only adopted English relatively recently in history.[23]

References

  1. ^ Petyt (1980), p. 70.
  2. ^ Petyt (1980), pp. 71–72.
  3. ^ Anderson (1977), p. 32.
  4. ^ a b Anderson (1977), p. 34.
  5. ^ a b Petyt (1980), p. 73.
  6. ^ Anderson (1977), pp. 34–35.
  7. ^ Anderson (1977), p. 39.
  8. ^ Shorrocks (1991), p. 325.
  9. ^ Eustace (1969).
  10. ^ Wright (1892), p. 174.
  11. ^ a b Petyt (1980), p. 76.
  12. ^ Anderson (1977), pp. 39–40.
  13. ^ Köckeritz (1932), p. vii.
  14. ^ Dieth (1946), p. 76.
  15. ^ Dieth (1946), p. 85.
  16. ^ Shorrocks (1991), pp. 324–325.
  17. ^ Maguire (2003), p. 2.
  18. ^ Orton (1949), p. 30.
  19. ^ Anderson (1977), pp. 35–38.
  20. ^ Fryd (2011), p. 88.
  21. ^ Trudgill (2004).
  22. ^ Knowles (1973), pp. 17–18.
  23. ^ Aveyard (2022), pp. 28–30.

Bibliography

  • Anderson, Peter (1977). "A NEW LIGHT ON EARLY ENGLISH PRONUNCIATION". Transactions of the Yorkshire Dialect Society. 14 (77): 32–41.
  • Aveyard, Edward (2022). "What is Dialect?". Transactions of the Yorkshire Dialect Society. 23 (122): 25–36.
  • Dieth, Eugen (1946). "A New Survey of English Dialects". Essays and Studies. 32: 76.
  • Köckeritz, Helga (1932). Phonology of the Suffolk Dialect (Thesis). Uppsala.
  • Orton, Harold (1949). "The Study of Dialectical English". The Leeds Magazine. 1.
This page was last edited on 26 November 2023, at 03:20
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