Apologetic apostrophe explained

The 'apologetic'[1] or parochial apostrophe[2] is the distinctive use of apostrophes in some Modern Scots spelling.[3] Apologetic apostrophes generally occurred where a consonant exists in the Standard English cognate, as in (all), (give) and (with).

The practice, unknown in Older Scots, was introduced in the 18th century[4] by writers such as Allan Ramsay,[5] Robert Fergusson and Robert Burns as part of a process of Anglicisation. The 18th-century practice was also adopted by later writers such as Walter Scott, John Galt and Robert Louis Stevenson. It produced an easily understood spurious Scots that was very popular with English readers and on the English stage. It was also sometimes forced on reluctant authors by publishers desirous of a wider circulation for their books.[6]

The custom "also had the unfortunate effect of suggesting that Broad Scots was not a separate language system, but rather a divergent or inferior form of English".[7] The use of the apologetic apostrophe became less widespread[1] after the appearance of the 'Style Sheet'[8] in 1947 and is now considered unacceptable,[9] the apostrophe-less forms such as (all), (give) and (with) being preferable.

L-vocalisation

See main article: L-vocalization. Early Scots had undergone a process of L-vocalisation where /l/ was preceded by the vowels pronounced as //a// and pronounced as //u̞// in closed syllables, which was completed by the end of the 14th century.[10] The cluster pronounced as //al// vocalised to pronounced as //aː// and pronounced as //u̞l// to pronounced as //uː// hence spellings such as a (all), ba (ball), ca (call), sa't (salt) and ha'd (hold),[11] and fu and pu with the doublets full pronounced as /[fʌl]/ and pull pronounced as /[pʌl]/.[12] The standard[13] literary apostrophe-less spellings for pronounced as //aː// (also pronounced as //ɑː, ɔː//) were and [14] with generally occurring word initially or medially, and occurring word final[15] thus aw (all), baw (ball), caw (call), saut (salt) and haud (hold).

The standard literary spelling of pronounced as //uː// was, generally preferred in the Scottish National Dictionary,[16] although the use of, borrowed from Standard English, became popular by the 19th century.[17] Thus fou and pou, but the form fu functioning as the cognate of the suffix 'ful'. L also vocalised after pronounced as //o̞// in closed syllables[10] resulting in a diphthong which became pronounced as //ʌu// in Modern Scots, for example knowe (knoll), fowk (folk), gowf (golf) and gowd (gold).[18]

Inflectional endings

The consonant clusters in the inflectional endings and, cognate with Standard English, changed to pronounced as //n// in Early Scots:[19] the modern realisations generally being pronounced as //ɪn// and pronounced as //ən//[20] hence the spelling in.

Consonant clusters

The cluster had been reduced to pronounced as //m// in Early Scots[19] hence spelling such as num'er (number), cham'er (chamber) and tim'er (timber), the standard literary apostrophe-less spellings being nummer, chaumer and timmer.[21]

The cluster is reduced to pronounced as //n// in some Scots dialects[22] hence spellings such as caun'le (candle), haun (hand) and staun (stand)[21] though the is generally written in the literary standard, thus caundle, haund and staund.

The cluster is also reduced to pronounced as //l// in some Scots dialects, hence spellings such as aul (old), caul (cold) and faul (fold)[21] though the is generally written in the literary standard, thus auld, cauld and fauld.

Loss of consonants

By the Middle Scots period, pronounced as //f// and pronounced as //v// deletion had occurred intervocalically and between a nasal/liquid consonant and a vowel.[19] Hence spellings such as de'il (devil), gi'e (give), ha'e (have), lo'e (love), o (of), o'er (over) and sil'er (silver), the standard literary apostrophe-less spellings being deil, gie, hae, lue, o, ower and siller.[23]

Also by that period, word-final pronounced as //θ// had been lost in a number of words.[19] Hence spellings such as fro' (froth), quo' (quoth), wi' (with) and mou (mouth), the standard literary apostrophe-less spellings being fro, quo, wi and mou,[23] the latter having the doublet mooth.

Change of vowel

In some Scots words the realisation differs from that of the Standard English cognate; hence spellings such as bak (bake), mak (make) and tak (take), the standard literary apostrophe-less spellings being bak, mak and tak.

Legitimate use of the apostrophe in Scots

Many words in Scots have both a full form and a contracted form. In contracted forms, an apostrophe is generally used in place of the elided graphemes, for example, e'en and even, e'er and iver (ever), eneu and eneuch (enough), lea and leave, ne'er and niver (never), ne'er's day and new year's day, nor'land and northland.

In the construction of the past tense or past participle, Scots often appends the apostrophe to verbs ending with ee to prevent three es from occurring in a single word:

Scots also uses, as does English, the apostrophe to indicate contractions of multiple words: A'm (I'm), wi't (with it), ye're (you're), o't (of it).

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Graham W. (1977) The Scots Word Book, The Ramsay Head Press, Edinburgh, p.11
  2. Purves D. (1997) A Scots Grammar, The Saltire Society, p. 111
  3. Web site: Aw Ae Wey—Written Scots in Scotland and Ulster. Eagle. Andy. 2014. v1.5.
  4. Rennie, S. (2001) "The Electronic Scottish National Dictionary (eSND): Work in Progress", Literary and Linguistic Computing 2001 16(2), Oxford University Press, pp. 159
  5. Murison d. (1977) The Guid Scots Tongue, Blackwell, Edinburgh, p.31
  6. Scottish National Dictionary, Introduction §18.1 p. xiv Vol. 1
  7. Corbett, John; McClure, Derrick; Stuart-Smith, Jane (Editors)(2003) The Edinburgh Companion to Scots. Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press. pp. 12-13
  8. http://www.electricscotland.com/poetry/purves/Grammer_Style.pdf The Scots Style Sheet
  9. https://web.archive.org/web/20130128131306/http://www.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/oswebsite/freefun/didyouknow/placenames/scotsintro.html Taylor S. (2009) Ordnance Survey: Introduction to Scots origins of place names in Britain
  10. A History of Scots to 1700, p.xc
  11. Scottish National Dictionary, p.xxi, Entry: A
  12. Scottish National Dictionary, p.xxiii-xxiv
  13. Scottish National Dictionary, Entry: U, Entry: W
  14. Scottish National Dictionary, Entry: A
  15. Scottish National Dictionary, p. xix
  16. Scottish National Dictionary, p. xiv, Entry: O
  17. Scottish National Dictionary, Entry: O
  18. Scottish National Dictionary, p.xxi, xxiii-xxiv
  19. A History of Scots to 1700, p.ci
  20. Scottish National Dictionary, Entry: -IN(G)
  21. Scottish National Dictionary, p. xxii
  22. Johnston, Paul (1997b). Regional variation in Charles Jones ed. The Edinburgh History of the Scots Language, Edinburgh University Press, p. 502.
  23. Scottish National Dictionary, p. xxiii