Max WEINREICH & the protovowel 34 { was: Given name Icek Eysyk} #general
Celia Male <celiamale@...>
Michael Bernet wrote: <Alexander Beider states in his Dictionary of Ashkenazi
Given Names, that the derivation of Ayzik >from Isac as the result of the diphthongization of protovowel 34 in Germany was suggested by Weinreich. ==Please, don't anyone call on me to explain what it means. I assume the source for that comment is Uriel Weinreich, the exponent of modern Yiddish, who has expired.> What a challenge! Please do not think I have any profound knowledge on this subject, but because of my interest in Norbert JOKL [see message archives], the tragic linguist and Albanologist >from Bisenz [Moravia] and Vienna: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norbert_Jokl I met a real Yiddish expert via Jewishgen and we have corresponded ever since. He explained it all in clear terms which should interest some of us. WEINRICH is Max WEINREICH (1893/94 Goldingen, Courland (Kuldiga, Latvia) - 1969 New York City): http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Max_Weinreich His name was also written as: Maks VAYNRAYKH. Max was the father of Uriel 1926 Vilnius-1967?: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uriel_Weinreich We have the beginnings of a family tree and a further raison d'etre for this posting. Back to protovowel 34: Laymen and scholars have long noticed that the vowels in Yiddish change regularly between dialects. A speaker >from Vilnius says 'gut' 'tog' 'reyt' 'ferd' (English: 'good' 'day' 'red' 'horse'; German: 'gut' 'Tag' 'rot' 'Pferd') but a speaker >from Lviv will say 'git' 'tug' 'royt' 'feyrd'. Historically, the vowels in each of these words go back to a single vowel but they have developed differently in different regions. To designate the single vowels >from which these dialectal variants came, Max WEINREICH coined the term 'kadmen-vokal (proto-vowel). For example the u and i in the words for 'good' in Vilnius and Lviv respectively, or the o and u in the words for 'day' each go back to a single kadmen-vokal. Max designated these vowels by two digit numbers. The first digits 1 to 5 correspond to the vowels a, e, i, o, u. {Easy isn't it - five vowels!] The second digit corresponds to historical changes that happened to the vowels. For example, the vowel in Ayzik is pronounced 'ay' in Vilnius and 'aa' in Lviv. Historically, it was an i sound so the first number in its name is 3. The second number, 4, is used for vowels that became diphthongs (clusters of two vowels) early in their history. This happened to the vowel in Ayzik so it is called protovowel 34. [All understood - hurrah!] Thank you Max and thank you Norbert JOKL, for my introduction to "my" Yiddish expert. On my last visit to Vienna, I photographed >from the inside, the door to JOKL's home - the last thing he would have seen of his home before he was deported. It moved me greatly and I think of him often. Celia Male [U.K.] |
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