In contrast to the traditional treatment of Frisian vowel quantity as phonologically relevant, it is considered to be predictable and dependent on the type of contact (long vowel = open contact vs short vowel = close contact). The replacement of an open contact by a close one in Frisian started in the late 17th c. and has been going on until now. Most disyllabic words in Frisian as well as in the other Germanic languages consist of a root and a suffix. As a result of the change of the contact type (open > close) and, consequently, vowel shortening, the number of words with coinciding syllable and morpheme boundaries has increased. This is similar to the change that has taken place in English and Danish, but in Frisian it has some peculiarit...
This article offers a phonological analysis of the vowel system of Runic Frisian (6th-9th c.) in str...
The quantitative reduction and loss of Proto-Germanic vowels during the transition from some form of...
In Modern West Frisian, by New Frisian Breaking, two rising diphthongs have developed with initial /...
The present article is a follow-up to the paper by Kuz’menko Yu. K. (2017) about the shortening of ...
How does language change take place and could developments be predictable? In this study, Arjen Vers...
How does language change take place and could developments be predictable? In this study, Arjen Vers...
How does language change take place and could developments be predictable? In this study, Arjen Vers...
A pivotal process in the loss of phonological quantity in West Germanic languages is what is traditi...
How does language change take place and could developments be predictable? In this study, Arjen Vers...
In Modern West Frisian, by New Frisian Breaking, two rising diphthongs have developed with initial /...
This paper presents data concerning differences in segment duration in Standard Danish due to s...
In Modern West Frisian, as a result of the New Frisian Breaking two rising diphthongs have developed...
In most of the literature on West Frisian, it is assumed that this language has a symmetrical vowel ...
This article revisits a vexed question, namely the phonological interpretation of the Germanic and O...
The recordings which formed the basis of Fischer-Jørgensen "Segmental duration of Danish words in&nb...
This article offers a phonological analysis of the vowel system of Runic Frisian (6th-9th c.) in str...
The quantitative reduction and loss of Proto-Germanic vowels during the transition from some form of...
In Modern West Frisian, by New Frisian Breaking, two rising diphthongs have developed with initial /...
The present article is a follow-up to the paper by Kuz’menko Yu. K. (2017) about the shortening of ...
How does language change take place and could developments be predictable? In this study, Arjen Vers...
How does language change take place and could developments be predictable? In this study, Arjen Vers...
How does language change take place and could developments be predictable? In this study, Arjen Vers...
A pivotal process in the loss of phonological quantity in West Germanic languages is what is traditi...
How does language change take place and could developments be predictable? In this study, Arjen Vers...
In Modern West Frisian, by New Frisian Breaking, two rising diphthongs have developed with initial /...
This paper presents data concerning differences in segment duration in Standard Danish due to s...
In Modern West Frisian, as a result of the New Frisian Breaking two rising diphthongs have developed...
In most of the literature on West Frisian, it is assumed that this language has a symmetrical vowel ...
This article revisits a vexed question, namely the phonological interpretation of the Germanic and O...
The recordings which formed the basis of Fischer-Jørgensen "Segmental duration of Danish words in&nb...
This article offers a phonological analysis of the vowel system of Runic Frisian (6th-9th c.) in str...
The quantitative reduction and loss of Proto-Germanic vowels during the transition from some form of...
In Modern West Frisian, by New Frisian Breaking, two rising diphthongs have developed with initial /...