Katana VentraIP

North Sea Germanic

North Sea Germanic, also known as Ingvaeonic (/ˌɪŋvˈɒnɪk/ ING-vee-ON-ik),[2] is a postulated grouping of the northern West Germanic languages that consists of Old Frisian, Old English, and Old Saxon, and their descendants.

North Sea Germanic

Originally the North Sea coast from Friesland to Jutland; today, worldwide

Ingvaeonic is named after the Ingaevones, a West Germanic cultural group or proto-tribe along the North Sea coast that was mentioned by both Tacitus and Pliny the Elder (the latter also mentioning that tribes in the group included the Cimbri, the Teutoni and the Chauci). It is thought of as not a monolithic proto-language but as a group of closely related dialects that underwent several areal changes in relative unison.


The grouping was first proposed in Nordgermanen und Alemannen (1942) by German linguist and philologist Friedrich Maurer as an alternative to the strict tree diagrams, which had become popular following the work of 19th-century linguist August Schleicher and assumed the existence of a special Anglo-Frisian group. The other groupings are Istvaeonic, from the Istvaeones, which developed into Franconian, and Irminonic, from the Irminones, which developed into Upper German.[3]

The so-called : converted *munþ "mouth" into *mų̄þ (compare Old English mūþ).[5]

Ingvaeonic nasal spirant law

Loss of the third-person [6]

reflexive pronouns

The loss of distinctions in plural forms of verbs, which reduced three forms into one form:[7] merged *habjum "we have" and *habēþ "you (plural) have" with *habją̄þ "they have"

person

Palatalisation of velar consonants before front vowels; while the languages further develop these palatal consonants into continuants as in church, Old Saxon did undergo palatalisation as evidenced by forms like kiennan "know" and kiesur "emperor" (contrast German kennen, Kaiser) as well as ieldan "pay", similar to English yield.[8]

Anglo-Frisian

Lack of in s/z-stem plurals; compare Anglian OE lombur "lambs" with OHG lembir[9]

i-mutation

The development of into a relic class consisting of four verbs (*sagjan "to say", *hugjan "to think", *habjan "to have", *libjan "to live")

Class III weak verbs

The split of the Class II weak verb ending*-ōn into *-ōjan: converted *makōn "to make" into *makōjan

[10]

Development of a plural ending *-ōs in a-stem nouns.

[11]

Development of numerous new words, such as the replacement of *newun "nine" with *nigun and *minni "less" (adverb) with *laisi

[12]

Broadly speaking, the changes that characterise the Ingvaeonic languages can be divided into two groups, those being changes that occurred after the split from Proto-Northwest-Germanic (Ingvaeonic B) and those preceding it (Ingvaeonic A).[4] Linguistic evidence for Ingvaeonic B observed in Old Frisian, Old English and Old Saxon is as follows:


Changes originating in Ingvaeonic A, like Old Norse but unlike Gothic and Old High German, include:[13]


Several, but not all, characteristics are also found in Dutch, which did not generally undergo the nasal spirant law (except for a few words), retained the three distinct plural endings (only to merge them in a later, unrelated change), and exhibits the -s plural in only a limited number of words. However, it lost the reflexive pronoun (even though it did later regain it via borrowing) and had the same four relic weak verbs in Class III.


Some varieties of Upper German, like Alemannic and Swabian, also share features with North Sea Germanic languages, namely the merger of plural verb endings (Swabian: mir machet, ihr machet, se/die machet "we/you/they make"). In Bavarian and Polish Yiddish there exists also the conservation of the second person dual pronouns, though only as a replacement of the second person plural (Bavarian/Yiddish: eß/etz, enk plural "you", compare the Sylt Frisian at, junk "you two").

Bremmer, Rolf H. (2009). An Introduction to Old Frisian. Amsterdam: John Benjamins B.V.  978-90-272-3255-7.

ISBN

(2013). Das Westgermanische – von der Herausbildung im 3. bis zur Aufgliederung im 7. Jahrhundert – Analyse und Rekonstruktion (West Germanic: from its Emergence in the 3rd up until its Dissolution in the 7th Century CE: Analyses and Reconstruction). 244 p., in German with English summary, London/Berlin 2013, ISBN 978-3-9812110-7-8.

Euler, Wolfram

(in German) (1942) Nordgermanen und Alemannen: Studien zur germanischen und frühdeutschen Sprachgeschichte, Stammes- und Volkskunde, Strasbourg: Hüneburg.

Maurer, Friedrich

Ringe, Donald; Taylor, Ann (2014). The Development of Old English – A Linguistic History of English, vol. II. United States of America: Oxford University Press.

(in German) Sonderegger, Stefan (1979). Grundzüge deutscher Sprachgeschichte. Diachronie des Sprachsystems. Band I: Einführung – Genealogie – Konstanten. Berlin/New York: Walter de Gruyter.  3-11-003570-7.

ISBN

Voyles, Joseph B. (1992). Early Germanic Grammar: Pre-, Proto-, and Post-Germanic. San Diego: Academic Press.  0-12-728270-X.

ISBN

Harbert, Wayne (2006). The Germanic Languages. Cambridge University Press.  978-0-521-80825-5.

ISBN

Fulk, R. D. (2018-09-15). . Studies in Germanic Linguistics. Vol. 3. John Benjamins. doi:10.1075/sigl.3. ISBN 978-90-272-6313-1. S2CID 165765984.

A Comparative Grammar of the Early Germanic Languages

Stiles, Patrick V. (2013-01-01). . NOWELE: North-Western European Language Evolution. 66 (1): 5–38. doi:10.1075/nowele.66.1.02sti. ISSN 0108-8416.

"The Pan-West Germanic Isoglosses and the Subrelationships of West Germanic to Other Branches"