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saxon-alphabet.htm
Restoring the Saxon Alfabet
by
Steve Bett [SB]
An
old alphabet for English - Spelling,
Pronunciation, and the Alphabet nu-saxn.htmenglisc.htmMSJ
In the early 1800's, Noah
Webster wrote, "Letters, the most useful invention that ever blessed mankind,
lose a part of their value by no longer being representatives of the sounds
orignally annexed to them." The effect is, "to destroy the benefits
of the alphabet."
Is it possible to reclaim
the benefits of the alphabet by finding the sounds that were originally
annexed to the letters? Is it possible to reclaim the benefits by
restoring the Saxon alphabet?
Add Twain's observations
In the 10th century, English
had a highly consistant spelling system known as the West Saxon standard.
The sounds that corresponded to the letters A E I O U used to be ah, eh,
ee, awe, oo.
Restore these consistent
relationships and English would once again have a functional alphabet.
When England adopted the
Roman alphabet, they also adopted the sounds associated with the letters.
To make a 5 vowel alphabet work with a Germanic language that had 12 vowels,
the Latin alphabet was augmented. The West Saxon standard (ca. 900
AD) added several runic letters for the missing sounds.
The ash [ae] provided a way to reference the sound that differed from the
Italian A. The West Saxon alphabet had 6 vowel letters, each letter
had a long and short pronunciation.
|
West Saxon Std.
840-1060
|
Letter
|
Checked
|
Free
|
|
A
|
uh, ago
|
ah, can
|
|
Æ æ
|
ash, æx
|
hæt
|
|
E
|
eh
|
*ape heeth
|
|
I
|
ih, ich
|
ee, *eel
|
|
O
|
aw
holy=holly
|
oh [ow]
good=o:
|
|
U
|
hook
hwk
|
hoop
houre
|
|
e eR
|
uh
|
uhr
|
|
|
An alphabet is an ordered
set of sound-signs. The alphabet (or correspondence table) makes
it possible for the letters (signs-symbols) to RE-present
sounds. The chief benefit of an alphabet is that with a set of just
35 symbols, one can transcribe all the significant sounds in the English
(Englisc)
langauge. This consistent set of relationships between letters and
sounds makes it possible to easily spell any word that you can pronounce
and pronounce any word you see spelled.
It is the correspondences
between symbols and sounds that define an alphabet. The original English
alphabet was the augmented Latin alphabet that became known as the West
Saxon standard. In the year 900, English (Anglo-Saxon) words were
written and spelled as they were spoken. There was a clear correspondence
between letters and sounds (graphemes and phonemes). Like many of the European
languages of today, Old English was over 90% phonemic or consistent with
its correspondence table. Each letter was associated with a sound or in
the case of vowels, a long and a short pronunciation.
Bett, following Dewey, estimated
that 60% of the functionality of the alphabet has been lost. Today's
writing system is only 40% alphabetic or consistent with its pronunciation
guide. Most of that loss of consistency came after the Great vowel
shift (ca. 1400) when the pronunciation of many vowels changed without
a correponding change in the way words were spelled. Most of the
traditional spellings are from pre shifted Middle English [1200-1500] but
they are no longer pronounced the way that Chaucer pronounced them.
Both Wijk and Paul Hanna
[1969] have suggested that 84% of dictionary spellings are in acordance
with a regular pattern. This is true but there are a half dozen regular
patterns for each vowel sound. For instance, there are 29 ways
to spell the vowel in cool and rule. The first
four ways account for about 75% of the dictionary spellings. So there
is regularity in English, but being able to guess a spelling with a 75%
probability after 4 tries doesn't make English spelling any less of a guessing
game.
The traditional (mid 18th
century) English spelling system [TES] is based on the notion that the
business of spelling is to represent the origin and history of a word instead
of its sound and meaning. The playwright George Bernard Shaw (1941)] argued
that this reduced the alphabet to absurdity. TES can be called non-alphabetical
since the spelling of more than 50% of the words do not match the dictionary
pronunciation guide.
The 10th Century
West
Saxon Standard - 14 vowels
| |
a
|
æ
|
e
|
i
|
o
|
u
|
'r
|
|
long
|
ah
|
*
|
eh-ey
|
eel
|
awe-oh
|
hoop
|
her
|
|
short
|
ago
|
æsh
|
ej-edge
|
ill
|
awe*
|
hook
|
other
|
æ can be merged with a
or marked with a double consonant |
Why make such big changes as A=ah,
I=eel, O=awe, U=ooze? The main reason is that this set of correspondences
allows learners to use spelling pronunciation. Pronouncing
all A's as ah produces understandable results. Pronouncing Ha
and Hay doesn't quite work. Pronouncing all o's as awe unless
in the terminal position also works better than other alternatives.
[à è
ì ò ù æ] |
.
The spelling ice
which according to the Saxon corresondence table would be pronounced /ees-uh/
comes from the original Saxon spelling: [is] /ees/. The current
spelling does show how the word was historically spelled in the 13th century.
(To understand how it was pronounced, one would have to consult the Saxon
correspondence table) As etymological or historical spellings, most high
frequency words go back to Middle English. Few go all the way back
to Anglo Saxon: [e.g., eye-ogle]. The problem comes from the
fact that we no longer pronounce the word /ees/ or /ees-uh/.
To maintain the alphabet, when the pronunciation of [ice] changed in the
early 14th century, the spelling should have been changed to [ais].
Dr. Johnson, who wrote the
first popular dictionary, felt that it was folly to imagine that
the dictionary could embalm language and preserve its words and phrases
from mutability. He saw no reason to standardize English spelling
beyond the word level because he felt that what changed the most was pronunciation.
As it turns out, English pronunciation is probably more standardized today
than in 1755. Compared to the changes that occured in the 14th century,
English pronunciation has hardly changed at all from the way it was spoken
in London in 1755. Some words and phrases have dropped out of favor
and new words and phrases have been added. Most of Johnson's spellings
have survived intact.
We have a choice, either
we can obscure the etymology or historical spelling of the word or we can
obscure the pronunciation of the word. Traditional English Spelling
[TES] obscures the spelling.
School [skool] is spelled
that way because it used to be spelled scul and pronounced shu:l.
sc=sh as in Englisc for English. The pronunciation is the
same. Old English c = tS so scip makes sense particularly
if it was pronounced /sss-chip/. This is certainly a better approximation
than /s-hip/. The mute H in [ship] is a marker rather than a pronounced
letter.
The proposal is not to restore
the old Saxon consonants because the new consonant digraphs are just as
good as the old ones. Knowing the old Saxon consonants, however, makes
it possible to understand spellings such as school /sku:l/. As in
Italian, the saxon c = ch /tS/. ciao = chee-ah-ow, circ=church, scip=schip.
Ship was probably pronounced close to the way that a scottsman would proncounce
the word
ship today [listen to Sean Connery's speech patterns]:
ship school=/shkip shkool/.
In the first century, School
was spelled scul and pronounced /schu:l/. In Middle
English, tS was represented as ch, thus scul became schule.
In many English dialects today, School is now pronounced skool /sku:l.
Some of the same variance is found in the pronunciation of schedule.
Those who pronounce schip as ship also want to pronounce schedule
as /shed-jul/. [see chart]
History
of Spelling and Pronunciation
in
1200, spelling changed with no change in pronunciation
In
1500, pronunciation changed with no change in spelling
Old
700-1066
|
Middle
1300-1400
|
Modern
1500-2000
|
Pron
1
|
Pron
2
|
|
scip
|
schip
|
ship
|
schip
|
ship
|
|
/stSip/
|
/stSip/
|
/Sip/
|
stSip
|
Sip
|
|
scedul
|
schedule
|
schedule
|
skejul
|
shejul
|
|
/stSedul/
|
/stSedul/
|
/skedZul/
|
skedZul
|
shedZul
|
|
scul
|
schule
|
school
|
shkool
|
skool
|
|
stSu:l
|
stSu:l
|
sku:l
|
Sku:l
|
sku:l
|
|
stan
|
ston
|
stone
|
stawn
|
stown
|
|
/sta:n/
|
/sto:n/
|
/stoun/
|
ston
|
stoun
|
|
sercl
|
cercle
|
circle
|
srrkl
|
suhkl
|
|
/s3rkl/
|
/s3rkl/
|
/s3kl/
|
/s3rkl/
|
/s3kl/
|
|
luv-luf
|
luffe-love
|
love
|
luv
|
lauv
|
|
lu:v
|
lu:f-@
|
luv / lov
|
l^v / l'v
|
lov
|
|
writ
|
write
|
write
|
wryt
|
ryt
|
|
wri:t
|
wri:t'
|
rait
|
wrait
|
rait
|
|
neur
|
neure
|
never
|
never
|
nevuh
|
|
nev'r
|
nev'r
|
nev'r
|
nev'r
|
nev'
|
|
hus ham
|
house home
|
house home
|
hous
|
hoam
|
|
hu:s ha:m
|
hu:s haum
|
haus houm
|
haus
|
houm
|
The eth [ Ð ð ] is a part of the Old Saxon
alfabet that is not included in New Saxon.
Sample
transcriptions: Spanglish
vs.
IPAand
ALC
Fonetik
CCS takes 7 lines, other
notations take 9 lines to say the same thing.
What needs to be tested
is the relative ease of reading and writing in these alternate notations.
| Saxon
- Spanglish |
IPA
Notation
'=shwa
':=3:
ò
=sh
Z=zh |
| Wans apon a taim
the byutiful dotr ov a gret majician wanted mor prlz tu pwt among her trezhrz.
"Lwk thru the centr ov the mun wen it iz blu."
sed hr mother in ansr tu hr question, " Yu mait faind yur hartz dezair." |
W'ns
'pon
'
taim ð'
bjutif'l
do:t' 'v
'
greit m'dZiò'n
want'd
mo:':
p':lz
tu: put 'm'ng
h':
treZju':z."Luk
thru: ð'
sent':
'v
ð'
mu:n hwen it iz blu:," sed h'r
m'th'
in æns':
tu: h':
kwestò'n,
"Ju: mait faind j':
ha:'tz
di:zair." |
| ALC
Fonetik (Ver.
of New Spelling) |
OGD
positional |
| Wuns upon a tiem, the buetiful
dauter of a graet majishan wonted mor perls to puut amung her trezhers.
"Luuk thru the senter of the moon when it is bloo," sed
her muther in anser to her question,"You miet fiend yur harts dezier." |
Wuns upon a tym, the biutiful dawter ov a grait majition
wonted mor perls tu puut amung her trezhers. "Lwk thru the senter ov the
moon when it is blu." sed her muther in anser tu her question, "Yu myt
fynd iur harts desyr. |
The
33 words below cover the simple rules to for Saxon-SPanglish Spelling
| Old Spelling |
Spanglish
Phonemic Spelling |
Comment
transcriptions are initially
in menu-spell - an intuitive sound spelling |
| medication |
medicasion
medicashan |
medi-cah-see-awn. (e) as in *bet *etch + (i) as in *sing,
*amino or *police. Phonemic spelling: medikeish'en. IPA=medikeiS'n |
| backpack |
bäkpäk
bækpæk |
bahk-pahk is close enough, phonemic bækpæk
Icelandic (æ) as in ash or Finnish and German (ä) as in
(act). |
| favor |
favor favr
feiv'r feivr |
fah-vawr.
fei/fey as in they. IPA= feiv'r |
| lighthouse |
laithous
laithaus |
haw-oos is close. haus /hae-oos/ is closer. German: (au)
as in Audi. Finnish: (ai), (a) as in (ah) + (i) as in (amino) |
| nearsighted |
nearsaited
nirsaited |
neh-ahr-sah-ee-ted (ir) as in irrigate -- German: (ai) as in
Tailand -- (a) as in far, (i) as in (amino and machine). |
| double |
doubl, dubbl
dwbl/d'ubl
d'abl / d'bl |
daw-oo-buhl is ok. dbl consonants could mark /'/
(w) Short (u). ('a) schwa as in ago. Syllabic (L). Syllablic consonants
LMNR do not require a vowel. |
| transportation |
transportasion
tränsporteishan |
transpor-tah-see-awn. Phonemic spelling traensporteish'n. [c]
used to be [ch] as in the Italian (ciao). transportac'n |
| throughout |
thruout
thruaut |
throo-aw-oot. German: (u) as in guru -- German: (au) as in sauerkraut.
Phonemic spelling thruaut. |
| geography |
jeografy
jiografy |
(j) always as in (jump) -- (g) always as in (go) -- (f) replaces (ph)
-- (y) for unstressed vowel at end of words as in *very. |
| kangaroo |
kangaru |
The (ng) sound is separate from the (g) |
| knowledge |
knowlej
nalej |
naw-lej or knah-lej. kn used to be pronounced and perhaps it
should be pronounced again as in Finland and Germany. |
| shudder |
shudder
shwdr
sh'adr |
The extra d can be used as a marker indicating /^/ rather than the
normal u sounds. Orm experimented with this approach. "-er" is pronounced
[air] which is close enough. No change needed. Phonemic spelling
would use the short a sound |
| zone |
zon
zown |
zawn. (o) is aw or oh, -- silent (e) unnecessary. The short u
is needed to approximate the oh sound. zaw-uun |
| journal |
journal
jrnl, j'rn'l |
jaw-oor-nahl is close. jrnl with syllabic R and L is closer to
the actual pronciation in General American (GA) IPA= j'rn'l |
| judgment |
jujment
j'ajm'ent |
jooj-ment. Double consonant rule to pronounce (u) as in (udder) is
satisfied by (jm) following (u). IPA j'jm'nt |
| should |
shwd
sh'ud
sh |
The semivowel w is the short u sound when not followed by a vowel.
At the beginning of a word it is almost always a consonant and the short
u is always braketed by two consonants. bwk, lwk, twk, wwl, wwd,
cwd. |
| azure |
äzhr |
(zh) replaces (s) as in (pleasure, measure, treasure, etc.) |
| church |
cerc |
(c) replaces (ch) in all such sounding words. |
| since |
since
sins |
sin-suh would be the Spanglish pronunciation of [since] which is close
enough. Phonemically, [sins] would be spelled sinz. |
| shield |
shild |
"..bot shild vs fro al wicked thinge" Spelling from 1370 w. midlands. |
| roar |
roar
rowr |
raw-ahr would be the Spanglish pronunciation which is close enough.
row+r would be the phonemic spelling. boat rower would have to be
spelled rowwr to avoid a homograph. |
| aboard |
aboard
abord |
ah-bawahrd is close but 'abord makes more sense. |
| accomplishment |
acomplishment |
ah-kawmplishment. Phonemic 'acomlishm'ent |
| apple |
apl
aepl |
ah-puhl is close enough. Phonenical aep'l.
ae used to be very close to eh. Now it is closer to ah. |
| automobile |
automobil
otomobil |
out-aw-maw-beel is ok, otomobil is closer to GA pronunciation. ot'amob'il
[IPA o:t'moubil] would be the phonemic
spelling. |
| elude |
elud
ilud |
eh-lood is close. ilud is closer to actual pronunciation. |
| encompass |
encompas |
en-kawm-pahs is close. enc'amp'as is the phonemic spelling. |
| English |
English |
The historical pronunciation was Englisc so this is a word that needs
to be repronounced. Inglish would be the phonemic spelling. |
| ice |
ais |
(a) as in (ah) -- (i) as in (Visa and Frito Lay). |
| inclination |
inclinasion |
in-clin-ah-see-awn inclineishan is the phonemic spelling. |
| outspoken |
outspoken
autspokn |
German (au) as (Audi and sauerkraut). |
| united |
united
yunaited |
oo-nee-ted. The Spanish pronunciation is probably good enough
for understanding. IPA= ju:nait'æd |
| whichever |
wichever
wicevr |
weech-evair. Phonemic spelling w'ichev'r. (w) does not
need the (h) used to be hwic-- (c) can replace (ch) |
| witch |
wich
wic |
The t is redundant. ch=tsh. The word (witch) derives from
Old-English (wicce) - thus, this "new" spelling is actually old. |
© 1999 BETA
spel/Eng-restored.htm
spanglish
       |