Germanic languages

Germanic languages
Branch of the Indo-European language family, comprising languages descended from Proto-Germanic.

These are divided into West Germanic, including English, German, Frisian, Dutch, Afrikaans, and Yiddish; North Germanic, including Danish, Swedish, Icelandic, Norwegian, and Faeroese (the language of the Faroe Islands); and East Germanic, now extinct, comprising Gothic and the languages of the Vandals, Burgundians, and a few other tribes. The Gothic Bible of AD 350 is the earliest extensive Germanic text. The West Germanic languages developed around the North Sea and in overseas areas colonized by their speakers. The North Germanic, or Scandinavian, languages, were carried as far west as Greenland and as far east as Russia in the Viking expansion of the early Middle Ages. The continental Scandinavian languages were strongly influenced by Low German in the late Middle Ages, but Icelandic and Faeroese have preserved many characteristics of Old Scandinavian grammar.

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Introduction
 branch of the Indo-European language family. Scholars often divide the Germanic languages into three groups: West Germanic (West Germanic languages), including English (English language), German (German language), and Netherlandic (Dutch (Dutch language)); North Germanic, including Danish (Danish language), Swedish (Swedish language), Icelandic (Icelandic language), Norwegian (Norwegian language), and Faroese (Faroese language); and East Germanic (East Germanic languages), now extinct, comprising only Gothic (Gothic language) and the languages of the Vandals, Burgundians, and a few other tribes.

      In numbers of native speakers, English, with 450 million, clearly ranks 4th among the languages of the world (after Mandarin, Hindi, and Spanish); German, with some 98 million, probably ranks 10th (after Bengali, Arabic, Portuguese, Russian, and Japanese). To these figures may be added those for persons with another native language who have learned one of the Germanic languages for commercial, scientific, literary, or other purposes. English is unquestionably the world's most widely used second language.

       Modern Standard Germanic Languages, TableSee table (Modern Standard Germanic Languages, Table) for information on each of the modern standard Germanic languages.

      The earliest historical evidence for Germanic is provided by isolated words and names recorded by Latin authors beginning in the 1st century BC. From approximately AD 200 there are inscriptions carved in the 24-letter runic alphabet. The earliest extensive Germanic text is the (incomplete) Gothic Bible, translated about AD 350 by the Visigothic bishop Ulfilas (Wulfila) and written in a 27-letter alphabet of the translator's own design. Later versions of the runic alphabet were used sparingly in England and Germany but more widely in Scandinavia—in the latter area down to early modern times. All extensive later Germanic texts, however, use adaptations of the Latin alphabet.

       Earliest recorded Germanic languagesSee table (Earliest recorded Germanic languages) for the names and approximate dates of the earliest recorded Germanic languages.

      The Germanic languages are related in the sense that they can be shown to be different historical developments of a single earlier parent language. Although for some language families there are written records of the parent language (e.g., for the Romance languages, which are variant developments of Latin), in the case of Germanic no written records of the parent language exist. Much of its structure, however, can be deduced by the comparative method of reconstruction (a reconstructed language is called a protolanguage; reconstructed forms are marked with an asterisk). For example, a comparison of Runic -gastiz, Gothic gasts, Old Norse gestr, Old English (Old English language) giest, Old Frisian iest, and Old Saxon (Old Saxon language) and Old High German gast ‘guest' leads to the reconstruction of Proto-Germanic *ǥastiz. Similarly, a comparison of Runic horna, Gothic haurn, and Old Norse, Old English, Old Frisian, Old Saxon, and Old High German horn ‘horn' leads scholars to reconstruct the Proto-Germanic form *hornan.

      Such reconstructions are, in part, merely formulas of relationship. Thus, the Proto-Germanic *o of *hornan in this position yielded au in Gothic and o in the other languages. In other positions (e.g., when followed by a nasal sound plus a consonant) *o yielded u in all the languages: Proto-Germanic *dumbaz, Gothic dumbs, Old Norse (Old Norse language) dumbr, Old English, Old Frisian (Frisian language), and Old Saxon dumb, Old High German tumb ‘dumb.' What may be deduced is that this vowel sounded more like u in some environments, but like o in others; it may be written as *uo, with the tilde indicating that it varied between these two pronunciations.

      The above example shows that such reconstructions are more than mere formulas of relationship; they also give some indication of how Proto-Germanic actually sounded. Occasionally scholars are fortunate enough to find external confirmation of these deductions. For example, on the basis of Old English cyning, Old Saxon and Old High German kuning ‘king,' the Proto-Germanic *kuningaz can be reconstructed; this would seem to be confirmed by Finnish kuningas ‘king,' which must have been borrowed from Germanic at a very early date.

      By pushing the comparative method still farther back, it can be shown that Germanic is related to a number of other languages, notably Celtic, Italic, Greek, Baltic, Slavic, Iranian, and Indo-Aryan (Indic). All these language groups are subsequent developments of a still earlier parent language for which there are, again, no written records but which can be reconstructed as Proto-Indo-European (see Indo-European languages).

Linguistic characteristics of the protolanguage
      The special characteristics of the Germanic languages that distinguish them from other Indo-European languages result from numerous phonological and grammatical changes.

Consonants (consonant)
 Proto-Indo-European had 12 stop consonants: *p, *t, *k, *kw; *b, *d, *g, *gw; *bh, *dh, *gh, and *gwh; and one sibilant, *s. (Stops are produced with momentary complete stoppage of the breath stream at some point in the vocal tract.) By a change known as the Germanic consonant shift (or Grimm's law), the 12 stops changed in Germanic to voiceless fricatives, voiceless stops, and voiced fricatives (see table—>). A few examples: (1) Proto-Indo-European *p, *t, *k, and *kw, as in Latin piscis, tenuis, centum, and quod, became Proto-Germanic *f, *þ, *x, and *xw, as in English fish, thin, hund(red), and what. Proto-Germanic *x and *xw early became *h and *hw in some positions, giving the alternations of *hx and *hwxw. (2) Proto-Indo-European *d and *g, as in Latin decem and genus, became Proto-Germanic *t and *k, as in English ten and kin. (3) Proto-Indo-European *bh, *dh, and *gh, as in Sanskrit bhū-, dhā-, and (g)-, became Proto-Germanic *ƀ, *ð, and *ǥ, which later changed to the stops b, d, and g in some positions (e.g., English be, do, and go), yielding *bƀ, *dð, and *gǥ. Proto-Indo-European *s, as in Latin sedeō, was unchanged; Proto-Germanic kept *s, as in English sit.

      In addition to these general changes, there were two special ones. (1) Proto-Indo-European *p, *t, and *k remained voiceless stops when preceded by *s or another stop; thus, Proto-Indo-European *sp, *st, *sk, *pt, and *kt yielded Proto-Germanic *sp, *st, *sk, *ft, and *xt, respectively. For example, Proto-Indo-European *sp and *st, as in Latin spuō and hostis, remained *sp and *st in Proto-Germanic, as in English spew and guest; Proto-Indo-European *pt and *kt, as in Latin captus and octō, became Proto-Germanic *ft and *xt, respectively, in Old English hæft ‘captured' and eahta ‘eight.' (By still another change, Proto-Indo-European *tt yielded Proto-Germanic *ss—e.g., Sanskrit sattá-, Old English sess ‘seat.') (2) By a change known as Verner's law early Germanic voiceless *f, *þ, *x, *xw, and *s (from Proto-Indo-European *p, *t, *k, *kw, and *s) were voiced to *ƀ, *ð, *ǥ, *ǥw, and *z, respectively, when they followed an unaccented syllable, and the first four of these thereby merged with the already existing *ƀ, *ð, *ǥ, and *ǥw (from Proto-Indo-European *bh, *dh, *gh, and *gwh). Thus, Proto-Indo-European *bhrātēr became Proto-Germanic *brōþēr (with þ after an accented syllable) and Old English brōþor ‘brother'; but by Verner's law Proto-Indo-European *mātēr became Proto-Germanic *mōðēr (with ð after an unaccented syllable) and Old English mōdor ‘mother.' (Proto-Germanic yielded Old English d; the th of modern English mother is the result of a subsequent change.)

      These changes yielded the following Proto-Germanic system of consonants: voiceless stops and fricatives, *p, *f, *t, *þ, *k, *hx, *kw, *hwxw; voiced stops and fricatives, *bƀ, *dð, *gǥ, (*gwǥw); sibilants, *s, *z; nasals, *m, *n; liquids, *l, *r; and semivowels, *w, *j (y). The sound alternation of *gwǥw is parenthesized because it early became either *gǥ or *w. The sounds *kw and *hwxw occurred as such more or less clearly only in Gothic; elsewhere they became the sequences *kw and *hwxw, or the labial element w was lost. All remaining consonants except z occurred between vowels (vowel) both singly and doubly (e.g., -p- and -pp-, -t- and -tt-).

Vowels
      In addition to the above consonants (12 stops and the sibilant s), Proto-Indo-European also had vowels and resonants. The vowel of any given root was not necessarily fixed but varied in an alternation called ablaut. Thus, the root that means ‘sit' was alternately *sed-, *sod-, *sd-, *sēẖ-, and *sōd- (English sit is from *sed-, sat from *sod-, and seat from *sēd-); and the root that means do was *dhē-, *dhō-, and *dhə- (English deed is from *dhē-, and do is from *dhō-). Other Proto-Indo-European vowels were *a, *ā, *ī, and *ū. The Proto-Indo-European resonants, which functioned as vowels in some positions and as consonants in others, were *i, *u, *m, *n, *l, and *r. Thus, *bhṛtó- (Sanskrit bhṛtá- ‘borne') had syllabic * (i.e., functioning as a vowel), but *bhéreti (Sanskrit bhárati ‘he bears') had nonsyllabic *r (i.e., r functioning as a consonant).

      This Proto-Indo-European system of vowels contrasting with resonants was reshaped in Germanic by a number of changes. Syllabic *i, *u, *, *, *, and * became in Proto-Germanic the vowels *i and *u and the sequences *um, *un, *ul, and *ur, respectively; nonsyllabic *m, *n, *l, and *r developed into the nasals and liquids *m, *n, *l, and *r, respectively; nonsyllabic *i and *u before vowels resulted in the semivowels *j (also symbolized as *y) and *w, though after vowels they continued to form diphthongs (*ei, *ai, *oi; *eu, *au, *ou). The Proto-Indo-European vowels and diphthongs then changed into Proto-Germanic sounds as follows:

 

      In this diagram the lines between two sounds indicate that the Proto-Indo-European sound developed into the corresponding Proto-Germanic sound; for example, Proto-Indo-European *i became either *i or *e, and Proto-Indo-European *ə, *a, and *o coalesced in Proto-Germanic as *a. These changes gave the following vowels for Proto-Germanic: short vowels, *i, *e, *a, *uo; long vowels, *ī, *ē2, *ē1, *ū, *ō; diphthongs, *ai, *au, *iueo. The origins of the vowel *ē2 are disputed, but it probably first arose from the diphthong ei in certain environments; *ē2 and *ē1 were high and low midvowels, respectively. In Gothic the two ē's merged, while elsewhere they remained distinct; thus, with *ē2, Old High German hiar and Old Saxon, Old Norse (Old Norse language), and Old English hēr ‘here' but with *ē1, Old High German tāt, Old Saxon dād, Old Norse dāð, and Old English dæd ‘deed.' Proto-Germanic also had three nasalized vowels: long *ĩ, *ã, and *ũ, which arose when, in the sequences *inx, *anx, and *unx, the n was lost with nasalization and lengthening of the preceding vowel.

      Proto-Indo-European had a variable pitch accent that could fall on any syllable of a word, but in late Proto-Germanic, two changes occurred: first, the quality of the accent changed, such that articulatory energy was increasingly focused on the accented syllable; second, the position of the accent was regularized on the initial (root) syllable. These changes had far-reaching effects on the subsequent development of Germanic, for nonaccented syllables became subject to reduction and even total loss; thus, Proto-Germanic *kuningaz but German König, Danish konge, English king. Reduction of unstressed vowels was often associated with the mutation or “umlaut” of preceding accented vowels. In some instances grammatical information that had been carried by suffixes came instead to be marked by alternations of root vowels—e.g., *fōt/*fōti but English foot/feet, German Fuss/Füsse.

Grammar
Declensions
      Proto-Germanic kept the Proto-Indo-European system of three genders (masculine, feminine, neuter) and three numbers (singular, dual, plural), though the dual was becoming obsolete. It reduced the Proto-Indo-European system of eight cases to six: nominative, accusative, dative, genitive, instrumental, and vocative, though the last two were becoming obsolete. In the adjective declensions there were two innovations: (1) To the Proto-Indo-European vowel types (*o-, *ā-, *i-, and *u- stems) it added some pronominal endings to give the Germanic “strong” adjective declension. (2) It extended the Proto-Indo-European *n- stem endings to all adjectives to give the Germanic “weak” adjective declension. Contrast, in modern German, strong gutes Bier ‘good beer' with weak das gute Bier ‘the good beer.'

Conjugations
      The Proto-Indo-European verb seems to have had five moods (indicative, imperative, subjunctive, injunctive, and optative), two voices (active and mediopassive), three persons (first, second, and third), three numbers (singular, dual, and plural), and several verbal nouns (infinitives) and adjectives (participles). In Germanic these were reduced to indicative, imperative, and subjunctive moods; a full active voice plus passive found only in Gothic; three persons; full singular and plural forms and dual forms found only in Gothic; and one infinitive (present) and two participles (present and past). The Proto-Indo-European tense-aspect system (present, imperfect, aorist, perfect) was reshaped to a single tense contrast between present and past. The past showed two innovations: (1) In the “strong” verb, Germanic transformed Proto-Indo-European ablaut into a specific tense marker (e.g., Proto-Indo-European *bher-, *bhor-, *bhēr-, *bhṛ- in Old English beran ‘bear,' past singular bær, past plural bæron, past participle boren). (2) In the “weak” verb, Germanic developed a new type of past and past participle (e.g., Old English fyllan ‘fill,' past fylde, participle gefylled). Weak verbs fell into three classes depending on the syllable following the root (e.g., Old High German full-e-n [from *full-ja-n] ‘fill,' mahh-ō-n ‘make,' sag-ē-n ‘say'). Gothic also had a fourth class: full-nō-da ‘it became full.'

 Many Proto-Germanic strong verbs showed a consonant alternation between *f and *ƀ, *þ and *ð, *x and *ǥ, and *s and *z that was the result, through Verner's law, of the alternating position of the Proto-Indo-European accent. See table—> for illustration of changes resulting from Verner's law. In this particular word, English has generalized the *s (now z): ‘freeze,' ‘froze,' ‘frozen.' German has generalized the *z (now r): frieren, fror, gefroren. And Netherlandic still shows the alternation: vriezen, vroor, gevroren. English has kept the alternation in only one verb: singular was, plural were. Traces of it still survive, however, in a few now isolated forms: seethe (Proto-Germanic *þ) and its old past participle sodden (Proto-Germanic *ð); lose (Proto-Germanic *s) and its old past participle (for)lorn (Proto-Germanic *z).

The emergence of Germanic languages
      Like every language spoken over a considerable geographic area, Proto-Germanic presumably consisted of a number of geographic varieties or dialects that over time developed in different ways into the different early and modern Germanic languages. Late-19th-century scholars used a family tree diagram to show this splitting into dialects and the relationships among the dialects:

 

      Though there is much truth in such a diagram, it overemphasizes the notion of “splits” into separate “branches” and obscures the fact that the transition from one dialect to another may be gradual rather than abrupt.

      Mid-20th-century scholars, using the findings of archaeology and the methods of geographic linguistics, attempted to correct the distortions of this family-tree model by noting also the linguistic features shared by two or more dialect areas. Archaeological evidence suggests that about 750 BC a relatively uniform Germanic (Germanic peoples) people was located in southern Scandinavia and along the North Sea and Baltic coasts from what is now The Netherlands to the Vistula River. By roughly 250 BC they had spread south, and five general groups are distinguishable: North Germanic in southern Scandinavia, excluding Jutland; North Sea Germanic, along the North Sea and in Jutland; Rhine-Weser Germanic, along the middle Rhine and Weser; Elbe Germanic, along the middle Elbe; and East Germanic (East Germanic languages), between the middle Oder and the Vistula rivers.

      By roughly AD 250 the division was much the same, though the Elbe group had spread southward to the Danube River, and the East Germanic group had moved southeast into the Carpathian Mountains and beyond. Then, toward the end of the 4th century, began the great Germanic tribal migrations. North Sea Germanic speakers spread south along the coast of the Low Countries and began their conquest of Britain; North Germanic speakers moved into Jutland; the Rhine-Weser group (Franks) expanded farther into Gallo-Roman territory west of the Rhine; the Elbe group (Alemanni, Bavarians, and Langobardi [Lombards]) spread farther south to the Alps and beyond; and several East Germanic groups left the Oder-Vistula area to begin their wanderings.

      This five-way division of Germanic peoples is based on archaeological evidence, and, while it agrees to some extent with deductions that can be made from the early linguistic evidence, the correspondence between archaeological and linguistic groupings is not completely straightforward.

      The first major linguistic division that developed in Germanic was between East Germanic and Northwest Germanic. It can be dated roughly to the 1st–3rd centuries AD. Northwest Germanic is attested in the early runic inscriptions (c. AD 200–500) from Scandinavia and northern Germany and encompassed all the Germanic territory from Scandinavia southward across much of Germany and the Low Countries. Spoken over such a relatively large area, Northwest Germanic had at least minor dialectal distinctions from the start, but several linguistic innovations spread throughout.

      The fragmentation of Northwest Germanic can be dated roughly to the period of the 3rd–6th centuries with the development of three major dialect divisions: in Scandinavia, North Germanic; in Jutland and the northwest of Germany, North Sea Germanic; and in central Germany, South Germanic. A number of linguistic developments from this period are shared by North Sea Germanic and South Germanic (but not by North Germanic), and the term West Germanic (West Germanic languages) is used in recognition of the strong affinities between these two groups. During this same period, however, North Sea Germanic and North Germanic also sometimes follow similar lines with regard to phonological developments in contrast with South Germanic. The three-way division is then based in part on the differing participation of North Sea Germanic in shared developments with either North or South Germanic and in part on developments that were peculiar to each of the three dialects. North Sea Germanic was at once a transitional dialect and a centre of innovation within the larger Northwest Germanic dialect continuum.

      In a position analogous to that of North Sea Germanic within Northwest Germanic, there surely existed transitional dialects between North Sea and South Germanic within West Germanic; the Old Saxon language may well reflect such a dialect, given that it shows a mixture of features agreeing with North Sea Germanic, as in English and Frisian, and with South Germanic, as in Old High German. The dialectal position of Netherlandic is complicated, and it is discussed further below.

      Some linguistic features associated with these dialect divisions are the following:

      1. Northwest Germanic versus East Germanic: In Northwest Germanic, the reduplicated forms found in the past tense of certain strong verbs were eliminated and instead new ablaut alternations were employed (often involving the vowel ē2), while, in East Germanic (Gothic), reduplicated forms were maintained—e.g., Old Norse (Old Norse language), Old English, Old Saxon hēt, Old High German hiez versus Gothic haihait ‘was called.'

      2. In East Germanic, Proto-Germanic *z was maintained as z (or s in final position), but, in Northwest Germanic, *z generally became r—e.g., Proto-Germanic *maiz- ‘more,' Gothic maiza but Old Norse meire, Old English māra, Old High German mēro. Within Northwest Germanic, however, treatment of *z in final position varied dialectally: (a) in North Germanic, it was maintained and appears as r; (b) in West Germanic (i.e., North Sea and South Germanic), *z was generally lost in final position in polysyllabic words; (c) in North Sea Germanic, *z was also lost in final position in monosyllabic words; for example, Proto-Germanic *dagaz ‘day,' Gothic dags, Old Norse dagr, Old High German tag, Old Saxon dag, Old English dæg; Proto-Germanic *wīz or *wĭz ‘we,' Gothic weis, Old Norse vēr, Old High German wir, Old Saxon , Old English .

      3. Associated with the West Germanic grouping are: (a) the change of *ð to d in all positions—e.g., Proto-Germanic *blōð- ‘blood,' Old Norse blōð- but Old English and Old Saxon blōd, Old High German bluot; (b) the replacement of the inherited second person singular past tense forms of strong verbs—e.g., Proto-Germanic *namt ‘you took,' Old Norse namt but Old English nōme, Old Saxon and Old High German nāmi.

      4. Some changes were shared across major dialects but carried out to markedly differing degrees or at different times. For example, in West Germanic all consonants (except r) preceded by a short vowel and followed by j were geminated (doubled), but in North Germanic only velars (k, g) were affected: compare Proto-Germanic *satjanan ‘set,' Gothic satjan, Old Norse setja but Old English settan, Old Saxon settian, Old High German setzen; Proto-Germanic *laǥjanan ‘lay,' Gothic (Gothic language) lagjan but Old Norse leggja, Old English lecgan, Old Saxon leggian, Old High German lecken. Similarly, the loss of nasals in the cluster nx with lengthening and nasalization of a preceding short vowel occurred in Proto-Germanic; in North Germanic this change also occurred in sequences of a short vowel plus ns (compare Old Norse oss ‘us,' Old High German uns) and in North Sea Germanic when the nasal was followed by any voiceless fricative (mf, nþ, ns; compare English below). In addition, fronting of nonfront vowels under the influence of following i or j in unaccented syllables, “i-umlaut,” developed earlier (6th–7th centuries) and more consistently in North Sea Germanic and North Germanic than in South Germanic (8th–9th centuries).

William G. Moulton Anthony F. Buccini

Additional Reading
The developments from Indo-European to Proto-Germanic and on to the daughter Germanic languages are treated in Herman Hirt, Handbuch des Urgermanischen, 3 vol. (1931–34); Eduard Prokosch, A Comparative Germanic Grammar (1939); Hans Krahe, Germanische Sprachwissenschaft, 7th ed., edited by Wolfgang Meid, 3 vol. (1967–69); Ludwig Erich Schmitt (ed.), Kurzer Grundriss der germanischen Philologie bis 1500, 2 vol. (1970–71); Frans van Coetsem and Herbert L. Kufner (eds.), Toward a Grammar of Proto-Germanic (1972); Paolo Ramat, Introduzione alla linguistica germanica (1980), also available in a German translation, Einführung in das Germanische (1981); Joseph B. Voyles, Early Germanic Grammar: Pre-, Proto-, and Post-Germanic Languages (1992); and Frans van Coetsem, The Vocalism of the Germanic Parent Language: Systemic Evolution and Sociohistorical Context (1994). The question of early dialect grouping is discussed in Hans Frede Nielsen, The Germanic Languages: Origins and Early Dialectal Interrelations (1989). Sketches of the earliest attested stages of the individual languages are given in Orrin W. Robinson, Old English and Its Closest Relatives: A Survey of the Earliest Germanic Languages (1992); and discussions of earlier stages and descriptions of the modern languages are found in Johan van der Auwera and Ekkehard König (eds.), The Germanic Languages (1994).William G. Moulton Anthony F. Buccini

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