If anyone’s wondering how this “magic e” nonsense happened in the first place:

In the Middle English period, short vowels in open syllables were lengthened, so /ha.tə/ became /haː.tə/. Then, the schwa was lost, thus /haːt/. Now, the only audible distinction between hat and hate was the vowel length, and so the <e> on the end was reanalyzed as a length marker; words that never ended with an /ə/ like whit /hwiːt/ were respelled as white to show the vowel length.

With the Great Vowel Shift, hate shifted from /haːt/ to /heːt/, and in the last couple of centuries to /heɪt/. Now, final <e> shows a mostly-consistent transformation of the preceding vowel, perfect for flummoxing second-language learners!

4 points

“The E makes the vowel say its name.”

permalink
report
reply

Linguistics Humor

!linguistics_humor@sh.itjust.works

Create post

Do you like languages and linguistics ? Here is for having fun about it


Share this community: [!linguistics_humor@sh.itjust.works](/c/linguistics_humor@sh.itjust.works)


Serious Linguistics community: !linguistics@mander.xyz


Rules:

  • 1- Stay on Topic
    Not about Linguistics, language, ways of communications
  • 2- No Racism/Violence
  • 3- No Public Shaming
    Shaming someone that could be identifiable/recognizable
  • 4- Avoid spam and duplicates

Community stats

  • 159

    Monthly active users

  • 58

    Posts

  • 514

    Comments