(no subject)
Sep. 24th, 2002 06:47 pmToday I have been mostly tidying, cleaning and making food for DM coming round tonight. Also, over the last few days, I have been involved in a most amusing email conversation with my old friend CA (who works with
grahamb) about Indo-European roots, English historical sound change, and such things. It's most enjoyable. It's the sort of thing I often seem to post about on usenet. I rarely post, but when I do, my posts are generally about historical linguistics, even if the relevant group is supposed to be about nethack or bdsm or local affairs. (I hasten to add that I don't start off-topic threads about linguistics; I just follow up when the conversation turns to, say, the correct pronunciation of Mjollnir in Old Norse, or the history of gender-neutral pronouns in English, or dialectal variation, as it does from time to time.)
This week, I think I will do some work on my website; I haven't updated it substantially for a long time.
This week, I think I will do some work on my website; I haven't updated it substantially for a long time.
no subject
Date: 2002-09-24 12:47 pm (UTC)i've never said it outloud, but in my head i always just say Mih-Jole-nir, but i bet that J makes a Y noise or something silly like that.
no subject
Date: 2002-09-24 12:53 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2002-09-25 12:28 am (UTC)"In early Old Icelandic manuscripts, Mjollnir's first vowel is written
(usually) as a "hooked o" i.e. like an o with a reversed cedilla under it.
Before the mid-thirteenth century, this sound is thought to have been
pronounced like the vowel in British English RP "bought" i.e. a mid-low
back rounded vowel, only not as long a vowel as in British English.
During the latter part of the century, this vowel was fronted, and merged
with "slashed o" i.e. o with a diagonal line through it, which was
pronounced similarly to the ö you describe above (though it was a rounded
sound, unlike the English vowel). The i of Mjollnir seems to have been
pronounced more like the vowel in English "eat" (only shorter) than in
"it" at the earliest period."