Indo-European ablaut In
Indo-European linguistics,
ablaut is the vowel alternation that produces such related words as s
ing, s
ang, s
ung, and s
ong. The difference in the vowels results from the alternation (in the
Proto-Indo-European language) of the vowel
e with the vowel
o or with no vowel. To cite a few other examples of Indo-European ablaut,
English has a certain class of
verbs, called
strong verbs, in which the
vowel changes to indicate a different
grammatical tense-
aspect. As the examples above show, a change in the vowel of the verb stem creates a different verb form. Some of the verbs also have a
suffix in the
past participle form.
Umlaut In Indo-European linguistics,
umlaut is the vowel fronting that produces such related words as f
oot > f
eet or str
ong > str
ength. The difference in the vowels results from the influence of an , or (which in most cases has since been lost) at the end of the word causing the stem vowel to be pulled forward. Some
weak verbs show umlaut in the present tense, with the past tense representing the original vowel: bought > buy (>). Hundreds of similar examples can be found in English, German, Dutch and other languages.
Germanic a-mutation is a process analogous to umlaut, but involving the influence of a low vowel such as causing a high vowel in the stem to lower.
Ablaut versus umlaut In Indo-European historical linguistics the terms
ablaut and
umlaut refer to different phenomena and are not interchangeable.
Ablaut is a process that dates back to
Proto-Indo-European times, occurs in all Indo-European languages, and refers to (phonologically) unpredictable vowel alternations of a specific nature. From an Indo-European perspective, it typically appears as a variation between
o,
e, and no vowel, although various sound changes result in different vowel alternations appearing in different daughter languages.
Umlaut, meanwhile, is a process that is particular to the
Germanic languages and refers to a variation between
back vowels and
front vowels that was originally phonologically predictable, and was caused by the presence of an or in the syllable following the modified vowel. From a
diachronic (historical) perspective, the distinction between ablaut and umlaut is very important, particularly in the Germanic languages, as it indicates where and how a specific vowel alternation originates. It is also important when taking a
synchronic (
descriptive) perspective on old Germanic languages such as
Old English, as umlaut was still a very regular and productive process at the time. When taking a synchronic perspective on modern languages, however, both processes appear very similar. For example, the alternations seen in
sing/sang/sung and
foot/feet both appear to be morphologically conditioned (e.g. the alternation appears in the plural or past tense, but not the singular or present tense) and phonologically unpredictable. By analogy, descriptive linguists discussing synchronic grammars sometimes employ the terms
ablaut and
umlaut, using
ablaut to refer to morphological vowel alternation generally (which is unpredictable phonologically) and
umlaut to refer to any type of regressive
vowel harmony (which is phonologically predictable). Ambiguity can be avoided by using alternative terms (
apophony,
gradation,
alternation,
internal modification for
ablaut;
vowel harmony for
umlaut) for the broader sense of the words. ==Stem alternations and other morphological processes==