Íslenskt mál og almenn málfræði - 01.01.2004, Side 77

Íslenskt mál og almenn málfræði - 01.01.2004, Side 77
Norn 75 There seem to have been a few speakers in Orkney in the mid-1700s, but probably not for long after that. In Shetland one or two may yet have been alive around 1800, but the situation described by Low sug- gests Nom can hardly have been a medium of everyday conversation in the outlying and isolated island of Foula even in 1774. 5. Traces of Norn in Orkney and Shetland dialect From the collections and analyses of Jakobsen, Marwick and later scholars, it is possible to capture something of the Nom substratum in Orkney and Shetland speech. It should be noted, however, that there exists as yet no definitive description of the nineteenth- and twentieth- century dialects of the Northem Isles, nor those of Scotland as a total- ity, so any account of traces of Norn to be found in Orkney and Shetland Scots must be somewhat impressionistic. Claims, often contradictory, have been made about affinities in intonation between Shetland and Orkney speech and various forms of Norwegian. In the absence of contrastive studies based on precise measurements, such assertions have little value. On the phonological level, it is generally thought that the wide- spread use in Shetland of /d/ and /t/ for standard English /ð/ and /0/ is due to the loss of [ð] and [0] in Norn. In Orkney too, it seems that in both Nom and Scots words original [0] at one time appeared as /t/, but this is no longer the case. It is further possible that Nom speech habits underlie the lack of distinction between initial [hw] and [kw] in Shetland, apparently also a feature of earlier Orcadian speech. Reports of the existence of long consonants in modem Shetland dialect (Catford 1957:71-2) remind one of the consonant systems of most varieties of Scandinavian. The vowel systems of modem Orkney and Shetland dialects, on the other hand, are Scots. It has been suggested that Norn speakers with their rich vowel system but relatively small number of consonant phonemes could more readily imitate the vocal- ic than the consonant distinctions of Scots (Catford 1957:73). It is nevertheless widely held that the [o(:)] sounds of modern Northern- Isles dialects are a Nom relic.
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Íslenskt mál og almenn málfræði

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