Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Part one Theory and methodology: approaches to studying the standardisation of English
- Part two Processes of the standardisation of English
- 7 Standardisation and the language of early statutes
- 8 Scientific language and spelling standardisation 1375–1550
- 9 Change from above or from below? Mapping the loci of linguistic change in the history of Scottish English
- 10 Adjective comparison and standardisation processes in American and British English from 1620 to the present
- 11 The Spectator, the politics of social networks, and language standardisation in eighteenth-century England
- 12 A branching path: low vowel lengthening and its friends in the emerging standard
- Index
12 - A branching path: low vowel lengthening and its friends in the emerging standard
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Part one Theory and methodology: approaches to studying the standardisation of English
- Part two Processes of the standardisation of English
- 7 Standardisation and the language of early statutes
- 8 Scientific language and spelling standardisation 1375–1550
- 9 Change from above or from below? Mapping the loci of linguistic change in the history of Scottish English
- 10 Adjective comparison and standardisation processes in American and British English from 1620 to the present
- 11 The Spectator, the politics of social networks, and language standardisation in eighteenth-century England
- 12 A branching path: low vowel lengthening and its friends in the emerging standard
- Index
Summary
Undoubtedly, the following account is hypothetical and oversimplified, but it has the virtue of organizing unruly observations.
(Margulis 1993: 244)Introduction: ME /a, o/ in modern RP
It is usually assumed that standardisation typically involves at least two major operations: elimination of variation, and codification (in dictionaries, grammars, orthoepic treatises, and other “authorities”) of the trimmed-down and “authorised” version. In the case of English this is all true enough, globally and within limits. But English is unusual in the amount of time it took, and the lateness of the prescriptive or codifying grammatical (as opposed to phonological) tradition. And, somewhat paradoxically, the even greater lateness and variational latitude of the actual codification of parts of the phonology, even though pronunciation was from the earliest times taken as one of the hallmarks of the standard variety.
The perception of a ‘standard’ or ‘best’ kind of English (as an ideal, if not an empirically localisable object) dates back at least to the sixteenth century. Leaving aside the now overfamiliar classic remarks of writers like Puttenham and Hart, here are two characterisations, one shortly before the period I'm concerned with here, and one from quite late. In the seventeenth century John Wallis (1653: 73) says he is describing ‘puram et genuinam pronunciationem linguae Anglicanae’; specifically not ‘singulas … variorum locorum dialectos, aut affectatas muliercularum ineptias, aliosve barbarismos’.
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- Information
- The Development of Standard English, 1300–1800Theories, Descriptions, Conflicts, pp. 219 - 229Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000
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