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Shape-shifting, sound-change and the genesis of prodigal writing systems1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 March 2009

MARGARET LAING
Affiliation:
Institute for Historical Dialectology, Linguistics and English Language, School of Philosophy, Psychology and Language Sciences, Dugald Stewart Building, 3 Charles Street, Edinburgh EH8 9ADM.Laing@ed.ac.uk
ROGER LASS
Affiliation:
Department of English, University of Cape Town, Rondebosch 7700, South Africalass@iafrica.com

Abstract

In a series of articles we have looked at individual early Middle English writing systems and explored aspects of multivocal sound/symbol and symbol/sound relationships. This article combines previous observations with new material, and provides insights into the genesis of these relations and how they may interconnect. Since many early Middle English texts survive as copies, not originals, they may give clues to the orthographic systems of their exemplars too.

We investigate the ‘extensibility’ of Litteral and Potestatic Substitution Sets. Writing systems may be economical or prodigal. The ‘ideal’ economical system would map into a broad phonetic or a phonemic transcription: that is, one ‘sound’, one symbol. In early Middle English there is no one standard written norm, so there is potentially less restraint on diversity than in standard systems. Further extensibility is built into the system. We show that much of what tends to be dismissed as ‘scribal error’ rather represents writing praxis no longer familiar to us – flexible matrices of substitution and variation.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2009

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