Gjertrud F. Stenbrenden
List of John Benjamins publications for which Gjertrud F. Stenbrenden plays a role.
A modern light on diachronic processes affecting coda /l/ in English Keys to the History of English: Diachronic linguistic change, morpho-syntax and lexicography, Porck, Thijs, Moragh S. Gordon and Luisella Caon (eds.), pp. 82–102 | Chapter
2024 This paper examines historical changes affecting coda laterals in British English, in the light of findings from articulatory phonology, with some insights from acoustic and perceptual phonetics as well. Historically, coda laterals induce pre-lateral diphthongisation and are themselves… read more
The rise and fall and rise of the digraph 〈oa〉 in English NOWELE 76:2, pp. 127–152 | Article
2023 The present paper examines the history of the digraph 〈oa〉 in English: it is relatively rare in OE and early ME, falls out of use in late ME, and reappears in the late fifteenth century. Different lexemes have been spelt with 〈oa〉 in the different language periods, but in the majority of cases,… read more
Chapter 1. Grimm’s Law and Verner’s Law: Towards a unified phonetic account English Historical Linguistics: Change in structure and meaning, Los, Bettelou, Claire Cowie, Patrick Honeybone and Graeme Trousdale (eds.), pp. 15–40 | Chapter
2022 This paper gives a unified account of Grimm’s and Verner’s Laws in light of findings from experimental phonetics. The Germanic stress shift and stress placement shift are separate phenomena, and I argue that Iverson & Salmons’ (2003) shift in ‘articulatory setting’ corresponds to the former, and… read more
The development of early Middle English ō: Spelling evidence Historical Linguistics 2013: Selected papers from the 21st International Conference on Historical Linguistics, Oslo, 5-9 August 2013, Haug, Dag T.T. (ed.), pp. 41–52 | Article
2015 This paper seeks to determine the developments of Old English/early Middle English ō in Middle English dialects, by making use of irregular spellings extracted from three corpora of Middle English dialect material, as well as from other sources of localised Middle English texts. I argue (a) that… read more
On the interpretation of early evidence for ME vowel-change
Historical Linguistics 2001: Selected papers from the 15th International Conference on Historical Linguistics, Melbourne, 13–17 August 2001, Blake, Barry J. and Kate Burridge (eds.), pp. 403–415 | Article