"long" and "short" vowels

Laurence Horn laurence.horn at YALE.EDU
Wed Jun 17 01:14:55 UTC 2009


At 6:53 PM +0000 6/16/09, Tom Zurinskas wrote:
>
>
>I'm not sure what is meant by "quantity and
>quality" in relation to the "long and shor"
>vowels.  Any examples?

Yes, long [a] interpreted *quantitatively* (often
represented as [a:] is pronounced with the same
tongue position as short "a", but just prolonged.
"Long-a" so-called, referring to what is called
long "a" in many grade school classes and in many
traditional dictionaries refers, as was noted by
Randy below, to exactly this vowel as it occurred
in Chaucerian Middle English, before the English
Vowel Shift, but now refers to the diphthong that
[a:] vowel turned into, i.e. [ey] or [ej]
depending on your transcription system.  This is
phonetically not an [a] at all, much less a long
one, but a vowel nucleus of a different quality
altogether.

LH

>  And if it's from Latin class does it relate to English?

I was referring to the phonetic character of the
vowels, not to which languages they occur(red)
in.  Long [a] phonetically, [a:] in my notation,
is not a diphthong in any language, whatever the
orthographic conventions or historical
development may be.  We could spell the vowel
sound in "mate" with a <q> or a <3>, but that
wouldn't turn it into a uvular stop or a prime
number, it would still be a diphthong beginning
with [e] or [E] and ending with a [i] or [y] or
[j] offglide.

LH

>And did you not hear "long and short" vowels for English at all?
>
>
>
>I appears to me that the terms "long and short"
>vowels is not a common in traditional Enlgish
>training as I had thought.
>
>Tom Zurinskas, USA - CT20, TN3, NJ33, FL5+
>see truespel.com
>
>
>
>>  ---------------------- Information from the
>>mail header -----------------------
>>  Sender: American Dialect Society <ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU>
>>  Poster: Laurence Horn <laurence.horn at YALE.EDU>
>>  Subject: Re: "long" and "short" vowels
>>
>>-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>>
>>  At 12:40 PM -0500 6/16/09, Kari Castor wrote:
>>  >Randy,
>>  >I have a (very small) smattering of Japanese, which uses short and long
>>  >vowels, but I guess I'd never consciously realized that those terms in
>>  >English once referred to the same phenomenon. In the context of English,
>>  >I've only ever heard them used (at least so far as I recall) in the
>>  >previously discussed manner where they're actually different vowel sounds.
>>  >
>>  >Thanks for the alternate terminology. As I said, I don't think it's an
>>  >issue likely to come up much in my own classroom, but if it does, I think
>>  >I'm that much more well-prepared to deal with it now. ;-)
>>  >
>>  >Kari
>>
>>  Like a lot of people, doubtless, I mostly associate short and long
>>  vowels with learning Latin in high school, where the terms do refer
>>  to quantity and not quality (and where our readers helpfully marked
>>  them all, as do dictionaries).
>>
>>  LH
>>
>>  >
>>  >
>>  >
>>  >On Tue, Jun 16, 2009 at 12:16 AM, Randy Alexander
>>  ><strangeguitars at gmail.com>wrote:
>>  >
>>  >> ---------------------- Information from the mail header
>>  >> -----------------------
>>  >> Sender: American Dialect Society <ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU>
>>  >> Poster: Randy Alexander <strangeguitars at GMAIL.COM>
>>  >> Subject: Re: "long" and "short" vowels
>>  >>
>>  >>
>>  >>-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>>  >>
>>  >> On Tue, Jun 16, 2009 at 8:17 AM, Tom Zurinskas<truespel at hotmail.com>
>>  >> wrote:
>>  >> > I hope teachers still use that phraseology to link with the past.
>>  >>
>>  >> You're hoping that they link with the very very distant past -- at
>>  >> least 500 years ago. Very few people, let alone students, will have
>>  >> any familiarity with the form of English that was in use at that time.
>>  >>
>>  >> "Long" and "short" are very useful terms when dealing with languages
>>  >> that have such phonemic distinctions, but since the number of speakers
>>  >> using English dialects that maintain any long/short vowel distinction
>>  >> is so small (one might even say statistically insignificant), those
>  > >> terms are very misleading when applied to "standard" English.
>>  >>
>>  >> In my own teaching and pedagogy (including training English teachers),
>>  >> I have avoided those terms, replacing them with "basic" for {bat, bet,
>>  >> bit, bot, but}, and "name" for {bait, beat, bite, boat, beautiful}.
>>  >> For sounds that are not clearly the five basic or five name sounds of
>>  >> {a, e, i, o, u}, I call them "other" vowel sounds.
>>  >>
>>  >> If I mention "long" and "short", I say that those terms formerly
>>  >> referred to what I call "basic" and "name", but as of 500 years ago
>>  >> are not applicable (500 years ago there really were long and short
>>  >> vowels). However, many teachers unfortunately still use them,
>>  >> including my teachers when I was little.
>>  >>
>>  >> For older students who can understand phonetic differences, phonetics
>>  >> terms can be used instead (front/back, open/close,
>>  >> diphthong/monophthong/glide, etc).
>>  >>
>>  >> --
>>  >> Randy Alexander
>>  >> Jilin City, China
>>  >> My Manchu studies blog:
>>  >> http://www.bjshengr.com/manchu
>>  >>
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>>  >>
>>  >
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