Sunday, June 11, 2017

minhag - Pronouncing "O" (Cholam) as "Oy"?


Typically in the Yeshivish world, the "O" sound is pronounced as "Oy" (i.e. "Moydim Anachnu Loch"). Where does this come from?



Answer



I've contacted Dovid Katz from Vilnius Gediminas Technical University, a renown scholar of the Yiddish language (among others), who wrote numerous papers on linguistics, and his PhD dissertation discussed in detail the phonology of the language(s) that Ashkenazi Jews spoke. As I could understand of his letter and his works, there was a proto-Ashkenazi long ō for cholam that was affected over the centuries by different linguistic phenomena (Great Yiddish Vowel Shift, see pp. 71–73 here and in his dissertation on pp. 77–81). First this resulted a vowel that he calls ɔu42, and it was further affected by the changes in the Yiddish language that they spoke (which was influenced by the German dialects of that era).


The fate of this sound used for cholam was connected with the following long vowels and diphthongs that existed in the various German dialects (see pp. 51–52):



  • Vowel 22 (long): originally this was in Yiddish at לייב, בייז or שיין (in German böse, Löwe and schön)

  • Vowel 42 (long): in Yiddish גרויס, ברויט or וווינען (in German Brot, groß and wohnen)

  • Vowel 24 (diphthong): in Yiddish גלייב or קלייד (in German glauben and Kleid)

  • Vowel 44 (diphthong): in Yiddish אויג, בוים or טויב (in German Baum, Auge and taub)


  • Vowel 54 (diphthong): in Yiddish הויז or טויב (in German Hause and Taube).


Geographic distribution of the Yiddish dialects


In the areas, where the dialects of Western Yiddish were spoken (see the map on p. 1023 here), ɔu was retained for cholam (the Yekkish au for vowel 54). In the intermediate areas ɒj was used (the Böhmen/Mähren/Ungarn ay for vowel 54). However, the speakers of Central Eastern and Southeastern Yiddish merged vowel 42/44/54 and created ɔj (the Galizianer oy), the thing you asked, which is also reflected in the current standard Yiddish orthography. On the other hand, the Northeastern dialect merged 22/24/42/44 (see p. 50), so for both tzeirei and cholam they used the same vowel (the Litvish ey).


For further questions – in this particular case – consult your local linguist.


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