The Evolution of English Pronunciation from the Shakespearean Era to the Present: A Historical Phonological Analysis
##semicolon##
https://doi.org/10.69760/egjlle.2602023##semicolon##
historical phonology##common.commaListSeparator## Great Vowel Shift##common.commaListSeparator## Early Modern English##common.commaListSeparator## Received Pronunciation##common.commaListSeparator## accent variation##common.commaListSeparator## sound change##common.commaListSeparator## English dialectsSantrauka
The English language has undergone profound phonological transformation since the Elizabethan period, when William Shakespeare composed his dramatic and poetic works in a variety of Early Modern English that would be largely unintelligible to contemporary speakers in its original pronunciation. This article examines the major stages of English phonological evolution from the late sixteenth century to the present day, with particular attention to the completion of the Great Vowel Shift, the development of Received Pronunciation, the divergence of American and British varieties, and the emergence of contemporary accent levelling and new dialect formation. Drawing on historical phonology, dialectology, and variationist sociolinguistics, the study traces the systematic sound changes that transformed Early Modern English phonology into the diverse range of accents and dialects attested in present-day English. The analysis focuses on four major phonological processes: vowel shifting and chain shifts, consonant changes including rhoticity and /h/-dropping, prosodic changes in stress and rhythm, and the sociolinguistic mechanisms driving ongoing change. The article argues that English pronunciation has never been static and that understanding its historical trajectory is essential for both linguistic theory and the broader cultural understanding of the English-speaking world.
##submission.citations##
Altendorf, U. (2003). Estuary English: Levelling at the interface of RP and South-Eastern British English. Gunter Narr Verlag.
Cercignani, F. (1981). Shakespeare's works and Elizabethan pronunciation. Clarendon Press.
Crystal, D. (2003). English as a global language (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press.
Crystal, D. (2005). Pronouncing Shakespeare: The Globe experiment. Cambridge University Press.
Dobson, E. J. (1968). English pronunciation 1500–1700 (2nd ed., 2 vols.). Clarendon Press.
Hock, H. H., & Joseph, B. D. (2009). Language history, language change, and language relationship: An introduction to historical and comparative linguistics (2nd ed.). Mouton de Gruyter.
Jones, D. (1917). English pronouncing dictionary. Dent.
Kerswill, P. (2003). Dialect levelling and geographical diffusion in British English. In D. Britain & J. Cheshire (Eds.), Social dialectology: In honour of Peter Trudgill (pp. 223–243). John Benjamins. https://doi.org/10.1075/impact.16.18ker
Kerswill, P., Cheshire, J., Fox, S., & Torgersen, E. (2013). English as a contact language: The role of children and adolescents. In D. Schreier & M. Hundt (Eds.), English as a contact language (pp. 241–262). Cambridge University Press.
Kökeritz, H. (1953). Shakespeare's pronunciation. Yale University Press.
Labov, W. (1994). Principles of linguistic change: Vol. 1. Internal factors. Blackwell.
Labov, W. (2001). Principles of linguistic change: Vol. 2. Social factors. Blackwell.
Labov, W., Ash, S., & Boberg, C. (2006). The atlas of North American English: Phonetics, phonology and sound change. Mouton de Gruyter.
Lass, R. (1999). Phonology and morphology. In R. Lass (Ed.), The Cambridge history of the English language: Vol. 3. 1476–1776 (pp. 56–186). Cambridge University Press.
Martinet, A. (1955). Économie des changements phonétiques: Traité de phonologie diachronique. Francke.
Milroy, J., & Milroy, L. (2012). Authority in language: Investigating standard English (4th ed.). Routledge.
Mugglestone, L. (1995). Talking proper: The rise of accent as social symbol. Clarendon Press.
Roach, P. (2004). British English: Received Pronunciation. Journal of the International Phonetic Association, 34(2), 239–245. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0025100304001768
Rosewarne, D. (1994). Estuary English: Tomorrow's RP? English Today, 10(1), 3–8. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0266078400007641
Trudgill, P. (1986). Dialects in contact. Blackwell.
Trudgill, P. (2004). New-dialect formation: The inevitability of colonial Englishes. Edinburgh University Press.
Wells, J. C. (1982). Accents of English (3 vols.). Cambridge University Press.
##submission.downloads##
Publikuota
Numeris
Skyrius
##submission.license##
##submission.license.cc.by4.footer##This is an open access article published under the Creative Commons Attribution
4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use,
distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is
properly cited. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
