Language and History in Early Britain: A Chronological Survey of the Brittonic Languages, First to Twelfth Century A.D.The history of British language and its descendants, Welsh, Cornish and Breton, before the Norman Conquest is very imperfectly known. An attempt is made here to trace, from all available evidence, their development from the first to the twelfth century, and especially to analyse the chronology of their sound changes. Part I deals with the sources, such as Romano-British and post-Roman inscriptions; names in Classical authors; early Welsh, Cornish and Breton documents; the Latin loanwords in British and Irish; and many British place-names in English, which can only be adequately understood when fitted into such a chronological scheme. Part II sets out in detail the probable dates of the linguistic developments concerned. |
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Page 128
... lenition was by now over . In point of fact , though Irish lenition was indeed complete by the time these words were borrowed , British lenition must also have taken place , turning British and British Latin intervocal -p- , -t- , -c ...
... lenition was by now over . In point of fact , though Irish lenition was indeed complete by the time these words were borrowed , British lenition must also have taken place , turning British and British Latin intervocal -p- , -t- , -c ...
Page 548
... lenition must be older than c . A.D. 300 because his supposed lenition- alternation of 8- and h- can only have existed in the first part of the Roman period . This theory has already been dealt with above , where it has been shown that ...
... lenition must be older than c . A.D. 300 because his supposed lenition- alternation of 8- and h- can only have existed in the first part of the Roman period . This theory has already been dealt with above , where it has been shown that ...
Page 561
... lenition of g fully complete between 509 and 521. For names borrowed into AS . we now see that almost without exception they indicate that lenition had already occurred when the settlements were under way , or at any rate do not imply ...
... lenition of g fully complete between 509 and 521. For names borrowed into AS . we now see that almost without exception they indicate that lenition had already occurred when the settlements were under way , or at any rate do not imply ...
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Language and History in Early Britain: A Chronological Survey of the ... Kenneth Hurlstone Jackson No preview available - 1953 |
Common terms and phrases
already Anglo-Saxon appears assibilation Baudiš BBCS became Bede Book of Llandaff borrowed Breton British Latin Brittonic Celtic Chad CIIC consonant Cornish Cornwall Cothriche derived Dict eighth century Ekwall eleventh English evidence examples fact fifth final syllables Förster Gaul glosses Gr.OI Grandgent Hence Ifor Williams inscriptions internal intervocal Irish language Late Brit later Latin loanwords lenition Lland loanwords Loth mid sixth century Mod.B Mod.C Mod.W Morris Jones names Nash Williams native Nennius ninth Ogam older Pedersen perhaps period place-names Pr.AS Pr.I Pr.W Pr.WCB probably pronunciation Ptol RBES Richter Rom.-Brit Roman Britain Saxons second half seems seventh century sixth century sound sound-substitution spelling spelt stressed syncope tenth century Thurneysen unstressed Voc.C vowel affection Vulgar Latin Wales Welsh written