Trisyllabic laxing
Trisyllabic laxing is a process which has occurred at various periods in the history of English: #The earliest occurrence of trisyllabic laxing occurred in lateDisyllabic laxing
Several now-defunct Middle English phonological processes have created an irregular system of ''disyllabic laxing''; unlike trisyllabic laxing which was one phonological change, apparent disyllabic laxing in Modern English is caused by many different sound changes: * ''please'' → ''pleasant'' * ''shade'' → ''shadow'' : ''pale'' → ''pallid'' * ''child'' → ''children'' : ''dine'' → ''dinner'' : ''divide'' → ''division'' * ''south'' → ''southern'' : ''out'' → ''utter'' * ''goose'' → ''gosling'' : ''fool'' → ''folly'' * ''cone'' → ''conic'' (and other words in ''-ic'') : ''depose'' → ''deposit'' Many cases of disyllabic laxing are due, as in ''southern'' and ''shadow'' above, to Middle English having had more unstressed sounds than Modern English: ''sutherne'' , ''schadowe'' . Cases such as ''please'', ''pleasant'' and ''dine'', ''dinner'' come from how French words were adapted into Middle English: a stressed French vowel was borrowed into English as an equivalent long vowel. However, if the stressed English vowel was originally an unstressed vowel in French, the vowel was not lengthened;Harrison, Thomas Carlton. ''Robert Robinson's alphabet and seventeenth-century English phonetics'' (1978), pg. 23 an example of this which did not create an alteration is OF ''pitee'' → Middle English ''pite'' ; Old French ''plais-'' (stem of ''plaire'') → Middle English ''plesen'' , ''plaisant'' → ''plesaunt'' . Some Latinate words, such as ''Saturn'', have short vowels where from syllable structure one would expect a long vowel. Other cases differentiate British and American English, with more frequent disyllabic laxing in American English – compare RP and GA pronunciations of ''era'', ''patent'', ''primer'' (book), ''progress'' (noun) and ''lever'', though there are exceptions such as ''leisure'', ''yogurt'', ''produce'' (noun), ''Tethys'' and ''zebra'' that have a short vowel in RP. On the other hand, American English is ''less'' likely to have trisyllabic laxing, for example in words such as ''privacy'', ''dynasty'', ''patronize'' and ''vitamin''. Much of this irregularity is due to morphological leveling.Monosyllabic laxing
Laxing also occurs in basic monosyllabic vocabulary, which presumably helps keep it active across generations. For example, the → shift occurs in the past-tense forms of basic verbs such as ''feel'', ''keep'', ''kneel'', ''mean'', ''sleep'', ''sweep'', ''weep'' and – without a suffix ''-t'' – in ''feed'', ''read'', ''lead''. Other shifts occur in ''hide'' → ''hid'', ''bite'' → ''bit'', ''lose'' → ''lost'', ''shoot'' → ''shot'', ''go'' → ''gone'', ''do'' → ''done'', etc.References
Sources
* * * * * Myers, Scott (1987)