Search results for "Umlaut"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Klar – klärer – am klärsten? Umlaut comparison as a doubtful case in contemporary German

2017

Abstract The present paper addresses doubtful cases concerning the use of umlaut in the adjectival comparison of contemporary German: bang ‘anxious’ - banger/bänger - am bangsten/ bängsten. It aims to shed light on the concrete distribution of this variation, i.e. the preference for one of the variants. Corpus-based analyses will show that the adjectives under discussion are not equally affected by umlaut variation: some are (surprisingly) stable (e.g., gesund ‘healthy’), whereas many others have a clear preference (i.e. > 70%) for non-umlauting forms (e.g., blass ‘pale’, nass ‘wet’). Interestingly, a few of the supposedly stable cases appear to have at least some non-umlauting forms (e.…

GermanPhilosophy of languageHistoryUmlautlanguagelanguage.human_languageLinguisticsYearbook of the Poznan Linguistic Meeting
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Levelling Of I-Umlaut in Classical and Post-Classical Old Frisian Nouns

2022

The paper discusses and evaluates the extent of i-umlaut levelling in classical (ca. 1300–1400) and post-classical (ca.1400–1550) Old Frisian nouns. In terms of the methodology, the main goal of the analysis is to identify the quantitative relation between the incidence of i-umlauted and umlautless root vowels in the nominal declension paradigms. In order to understand and assess the process of levelling of i-umlaut in Old Frisian, three aspects that may have had an impact on the presence or absence of i-mutated vowels are taken into account, namely: the presence of the i-mutation trigger *-ī and *-j and *-i, the establishment of whether i-mutation is noticeable in the entire paradigm or it…

Linguistics and Languagenouns; levellingLiterature and Literary Theoryi-umlautpost-classical Old Frisianclassical Old FrisianLanguage and LinguisticsGema Online Journal of Language Studies
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