It is readily apparent that syllable structure plays a role in an exceptionally large number of phonological phenomena in the early Germanic languages, ranging from reduplication to vowel lengthening. However, this area of research has been largely neglected by most scholars currently involved with phonological theory. The main goal of this dissertation is to begin to remedy this long-standing neglect, by developing an analysis of one of the classic problems of historical Germanic phonology, Sievers' Law, using a modern formal phonological framework, Optimality Theory (OT). Since Sievers' Law is best preserved (in Germanic) in Gothic and Old Norse, these two languages are the focus of the research reported on here. I argue that most cases o...
The simple goal with this series of lectures is to present a few aspects of Norwegian phonology whic...
Proto-Germanic (PGmc.) ai in stressed syllables shows varied outcomes in Germanic languages ( ā, ē, ...
In his “Overview of Old Saxon Linguistics, 1992-2008” published in 2010 in a miscellany titled Persp...
It is readily apparent that syllable structure plays a role in an exceptionally large number of phon...
I examine those linguistic features of Old English and Old Norse which serve as the basic elements f...
This study provides a reconstruction of the development of the Germanic stress and syllabification s...
This article discusses methodological aspects of using Gothic orthography for the purposes of deduci...
This article discusses the transition from a system with contrastive, segmental quantity in Old Nors...
A pivotal process in the loss of phonological quantity in West Germanic languages is what is traditi...
This dissertation investigates three sound changes in the early history of Germanic with an approach...
This dissertation is an examination of the prosodic structure of the closely related Goidelic langua...
This article offers a phonological analysis of the vowel system of Runic Frisian (6th-9th c.) in str...
Since its renaissance in a series of papers by Theo Vennemann, the concept of syllable cut has been ...
This article offers a phonological analysis of the vowel system of Runic Frisian (6th-9th c.) in str...
This paper is the first in a three-part series or tryptic that argues for the Old Germanic origins o...
The simple goal with this series of lectures is to present a few aspects of Norwegian phonology whic...
Proto-Germanic (PGmc.) ai in stressed syllables shows varied outcomes in Germanic languages ( ā, ē, ...
In his “Overview of Old Saxon Linguistics, 1992-2008” published in 2010 in a miscellany titled Persp...
It is readily apparent that syllable structure plays a role in an exceptionally large number of phon...
I examine those linguistic features of Old English and Old Norse which serve as the basic elements f...
This study provides a reconstruction of the development of the Germanic stress and syllabification s...
This article discusses methodological aspects of using Gothic orthography for the purposes of deduci...
This article discusses the transition from a system with contrastive, segmental quantity in Old Nors...
A pivotal process in the loss of phonological quantity in West Germanic languages is what is traditi...
This dissertation investigates three sound changes in the early history of Germanic with an approach...
This dissertation is an examination of the prosodic structure of the closely related Goidelic langua...
This article offers a phonological analysis of the vowel system of Runic Frisian (6th-9th c.) in str...
Since its renaissance in a series of papers by Theo Vennemann, the concept of syllable cut has been ...
This article offers a phonological analysis of the vowel system of Runic Frisian (6th-9th c.) in str...
This paper is the first in a three-part series or tryptic that argues for the Old Germanic origins o...
The simple goal with this series of lectures is to present a few aspects of Norwegian phonology whic...
Proto-Germanic (PGmc.) ai in stressed syllables shows varied outcomes in Germanic languages ( ā, ē, ...
In his “Overview of Old Saxon Linguistics, 1992-2008” published in 2010 in a miscellany titled Persp...