@simonroper9218
  @simonroper9218
Simon Roper | The Great Vowel Shift in the North of England @simonroper9218 | Uploaded June 2021 | Updated October 2024, 20 hours ago.
Lass, R. 2000. The Cambridge History of the English Language, Vol III. Cambridge University Press.
(^ I think I mistakenly marked this as 'Lass 1999' in the video)

Hume, A. 1617. Of the Orthographie of the Britan tongue.

Tolkien, J. R. R. 1934. Chaucer as a Philologist: "The Reeve's Tale". Transactions of the Philological Society 1-70.

Smith, J. 2007. Sound change and the history of English. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Prichard's paper (possibly not accessible to everyone): https://www.academia.edu/9920333/Northern_dialect_evidence_for_the_chronology_of_the_Great_Vowel_Shift

For a little analysis of Hume's orthography (including what sound might be implied by the spelling 'heal'), here is a link to something I wrote a few months ago: issuu.com/simonroperr/docs/cumbrian_new/s/11691550

_______________________

A friend's take on the Old Norse poem Hávamál: youtube.com/watch?v=-0zULKP696M

Another friend's recent song: open.spotify.com/track/3P7vB84AiTqNFrE0L59Ega?si=463b4a20f2564d2f

My dad's Etsy shop: etsy.com/uk/shop/RopShopCrafts?ref=shop_sugg

My sister's Etsy shop: etsy.com/uk/shop/CryinginClass?ref=usf_2020
The Great Vowel Shift in the North of EnglandRodents and Small Mammals in Early Medieval EnglandCumbria & Yorkshire - An Older Dialect ComparisonCasual Conversation in HistoryStress & Pitch Accent in Germanic LanguagesWhat if Old Names for Gods had Survived into English?The Importance of Anthropology in Anglo-Saxon StudiesOld English and Middle English; why are they so different?1970s vs. 2020s Southeastern English SpeechIngressive Speech - A Short OverviewBurne, Roper & Sons Whisky Advertisement 2016Geordie and Northeastern Phonology

The Great Vowel Shift in the North of England @simonroper9218

SHARE TO X SHARE TO REDDIT SHARE TO FACEBOOK WALLPAPER