The early Middle English scribe: Sprach er wie er schrieb?
Written Middle English is not phonetic transcript. The sound-pattern is not directly known, but has to be reconstructed – from, among other things, written forms interpreted in the light of the particular spelling systems to which they belong. Pronunciation is an object of discovery, not a premiss: assumptions about the way (or ways) in which a written form was pronounced, ought not to be built in to the collection of the primary evidence. It does not follow that phonetic considerations are ruled out for subsequent interpretation. (Benskin 1991: 226)
Cited by (3)
Cited by three other publications
Angerer, Michael Lysander
2024.
Hebban olla vogala: An Eleventh-Century Link Between Dutch and English Literary History.
Neophilologus 108:3
► pp. 467 ff.
Okrent, Arika & Sean O'Neill
2021.
Highly Irregular,
Meurman‐Solin, Anneli
2012.
Historical Dialectology: Space as a Variable in the Reconstruction of Regional Dialects. In
The Handbook of Historical Sociolinguistics,
► pp. 465 ff.
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