Palatable Palatalization. A Story of EACH, MUCH, SUCH, and WHICH in Middle English Dialects

This book came to life in need for a palatable explanation to one of the most influential processes in English phonology: the true character of palatalization is shown in the high-frequency words EACH, MUCH, SUCH and WHICH. Look inside below.

Tags:

historical phonology Linguistics palatalization

Choose format:

Cite This book

Kocel, Agnieszka. Palatable Palatalization. A Story of EACH, MUCH, SUCH, and WHICH in Middle English Dialects. Æ Academic Publishing, 2016.

Kocel, A. (2016). Palatable Palatalization. A Story of EACH, MUCH, SUCH, and WHICH in Middle English Dialects. Æ Academic Publishing.

Kocel, A. (2016) Palatable Palatalization. A Story of EACH, MUCH, SUCH, and WHICH in Middle English Dialects. Æ Academic Publishing.

Kocel, Agnieszka. Palatable Palatalization. A Story of EACH, MUCH, SUCH, and WHICH in Middle English Dialects. Æ Academic Publishing, 2016.

Kocel A. Palatable Palatalization. A Story of EACH, MUCH, SUCH, and WHICH in Middle English Dialects. Æ Academic Publishing; 2016.

Agnieszka Kocel-Duraj

Assistant Professor at the University of Bielsko-Biała, Poland; linguist and sworn translator/interpreter, with specialization in legal translation and conference interpreting.

Agnieszka graduated from the Institute of English Studies, University of Warsaw in Poland, where she obtained her Ph.D. in historical phonology and discovered her present path. She has since completed two years of post-graduate training in conference interpretation, complimented with a few years of teaching experience acquired in Poland and England – places which may now lay claim both as her home, and to her heart.

Description

The concept of palatalization has always intrigued linguists trying to find a palatable explanation for one of the most influential processes in English phonology. Having initiated in Old English, palatalization took Middle English by storm, introducing a variety of forms, some of which have survived well into our modern times. Contrary to popular belief, however, the process itself was far from palatable, proving lack of consistency observed across different dialects of that period.

The present monograph intends to show the true, both palatable and unpalatable, character of palatalization, examining its effects exerted on four high-frequency words: EACH, MUCH, SUCH and WHICH, all of which appear copiously in the texts of the Innsbruck Prose Corpus.

We aim to analyze the extent of phonological inhomogeneity from the point of view of lexical diffusion, which demonstrates the impossibility to establish any definitive dialectal boundaries underlining the existence of a [k]-dialect and, consequently, the everlasting idea of the north-south divide.

Look inside

Only for subscribers

Become a Æ Subscriber and unlock access to many benefits!

Research

Technical information

Author

Agnieszka Kocel-Duraj

Published in

2016

Series

Warsaw Studies in English Historical Linguistics

Volume

6

Editor

Jerzy Wełna

Edition

1st ed.

ISBN

pbk: 978-1-68346-116-6, ePub: 978-1-68346-118-0, mobi: 978-1-68346-117-3, pdf: 978-1-68346-119-7, ISSN: 2373-2652 (print), 2373-2733 (online)

# of pages

xxii + 273

Binding

pbk, sewn

Dimensions

138 x 215 mm

Weight

435 g