Skip to content
Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter Mouton March 28, 2002

The Relationship between Vowel and Consonant Duration in Orkney and Shetland Dialects

  • Klaske van Leyden
From the journal Phonetica

Abstract

In Shetland dialect, the northernmost branch of Lowland Scots, stressed monosyllables, when closed by a consonant, generally contain either a durationally short vowel followed by a durationally long consonant, or a long vowel followed by a short consonant. This feature, first described in the 1950s, can most likely be ascribed to the Scandinavian substratum of the dialect. Although several experimental investigations into the duration of Scottish vowels have been carried out recently, most of them in the light of the Scottish vowel length rule, none of them so far have looked at Shetland dialect or the relationship between the duration of the vowel and the final consonant. In the present study we will examine vowel and final consonant duration in monosyllabic words in both Shetland and Orkney dialects, as well as in Standard Scottish English and Standard Norwegian, in order to establish whether in Shetland dialect, durationally short consonants follow durationally long vowels and vice versa and if so, if this is indeed a feature peculiar to Shetland.


verified


References

1 Abercrombie, D.: The accents of standard English in Scotland; in Aitken, McArthur, Languages of Scotland, pp. 65–84 (Chambers, Edinburgh 1979).Search in Google Scholar

2 Agutter, A.: The dangers of dialect parochialism: the Scottish vowel length rule; in Fisiak, Historical dialectology: regional and social, pp. 1–21 (Mouton-de Gruyter, Berlin 1987).10.1515/9783110848137.1Search in Google Scholar

3 Aitken, A.J.: The Scottish vowel-length rule; in Benskin, Samuels, So meny people longages and tonges: philological essays in Scots and mediaeval English presented to Angus McIntosh, pp. 131–157 (Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh 1981).Search in Google Scholar

4 Arnáson, K.: Quantity in historical phonology (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 1980).Search in Google Scholar

5 Barnes, M.P.: Norn. Scripta islandica 35: 23–42 (1984).Search in Google Scholar

6 Boersma, P.; Weenink, D.: PRAAT: a system for doing phonetics by computer, version 3.4, Rapport No. 132 (Instituut voor Fonetische Wetenschappen, Universiteit van Amsterdam 1996).Search in Google Scholar

7 Catford, J.C.: Shetland dialect. Shetland Folkbook 3: 71–76 (1957a).Search in Google Scholar

8 Catford, J.C.: Vowel systems of Scots dialects. Trans. philol. Soc. 1957b: 107–117.10.1111/j.1467-968X.1957.tb00571.xSearch in Google Scholar

9 Elert, C.-C.: Phonologic studies in quantity in Swedish (Almqvist & Wiksells, Uppsala 1964).Search in Google Scholar

10 Gimson, A.C.: An introduction to the pronunciation of English; 5th ed. (Arnold, London 1962).Search in Google Scholar

11 Graham, J.J.: The Shetland dictionary (Shetland Times, Lerwick 1993).Search in Google Scholar

12 Grant, W.; Murison, D.D.: The Scottish national dictionary (Aberdeen University Press, Aberdeen 1931–1976).Search in Google Scholar

13 Haugen, E.: The Scandinavian languages: an introduction to their history (Faber, London 1976).Search in Google Scholar

14 Jakobsen, J.: An etymological dictionary of the Norn language in Shetland, 2 vol. (Nutt, London/Prior, Copenhagen 1928/1932).Search in Google Scholar

15 Johnston, P.: Regional variation; in Jones, The Edinburgh history of the Scots language (Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh 1997).10.1515/9781474410977Search in Google Scholar

16 Klatt, D.H.: Voice onset time, frication and aspiration in word-initial consonant clusters. MIT q. Prog. Rep. 109: 124–136 (1974).Search in Google Scholar

17 Lindblom, B.E.F.; Lyberg, B.; Holmgren, K.: Durational patterns of Swedish phonology: do they reflect short-term motor memory processes? (Indiana University Linguistics Club, Bloomington 1981).Search in Google Scholar

18 McClure, J.D.: Vowel duration in a Scottish accent. J. int. phonet. Assoc. 7: 10–16 (1977).10.1017/S0025100300001560Search in Google Scholar

19 McKenna, G.E.: Vowel duration in the Standard English of Scotland; M. Litt. diss. University of Edinburgh (unpublished, 1988).Search in Google Scholar

20 Mather, J.Y.; Speitel, H.H.: The linguistic atlas of Scotland, vol. I–III (Croom Helm, London 1975, 1977, 1986).Search in Google Scholar

21 Melchers, G.: Is the structure of the syllable in Shetland dialect ‘Scandinavian’? in Elert, Johansson, Strangert, Nordic prosody III. (Umeå Stud. Humanities 59, pp. 179–186 (University of Umeå, Umeå 1984).Search in Google Scholar

22 Peterson, G.E.; Lehiste, I.: Duration of syllable nuclei in English. J. acoust. Soc. Am. 32: 693–703 (1960).10.1121/1.1908183Search in Google Scholar

23 Wells, J.C.: Accents of English (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 1982).10.1017/CBO9780511611759Search in Google Scholar

Published Online: 2002-03-28
Published in Print: 2002-03-01

© 2002 S. Karger AG, Basel

Downloaded on 26.4.2024 from https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1159/000056202/html
Scroll to top button