Spelling variation in Greek letters from Oxyrhynchus, 50-350 AD

<p>Postclassical Greek is well-attested. Over 4.5 million words survive in over 80,000 published Greek papyri, making papyrus (=reed) texts valuable for studying language variation and change. Because papyri survive direct, that variation includes variation in spelling.</p> <br> &l...

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Main Author: Smith, W
Other Authors: Benaissa, A
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2024
Subjects:
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author Smith, W
author2 Benaissa, A
author_facet Benaissa, A
Smith, W
author_sort Smith, W
collection OXFORD
description <p>Postclassical Greek is well-attested. Over 4.5 million words survive in over 80,000 published Greek papyri, making papyrus (=reed) texts valuable for studying language variation and change. Because papyri survive direct, that variation includes variation in spelling.</p> <br> <p>Past work has used this to reconstruct sound change. But focusing exclusively on phonological reconstruction misses sociolinguistic information conveyed by spelling, and ignores that spelling variation has non-phonological as well as phonological drivers. Phonological approaches can run into uncertainty because of long-term contact between Greek and Egyptian between c. 300 BC–800 AD. Unexamined assumptions about linguistic normativity also mean spelling is overemphasised when evaluating contact phenomena.</p> <br> <p>This thesis therefore focuses on non-phonological motives influencing spelling variation. It adopts a dual-route model of spelling and adapts methods from corpus linguistics, especially of historical English, to quantify and describe spelling patterns in a coherent dataset of 771 papyrus letters from Oxyrhynchus dated between 50–350 AD. An emergent, evaluation-free approach allows the thesis to identify and contextualise patterns missed by prior error-based work. It shows that non-phonological variation patterns appear even in texts written by atypically variable spellers. Such spelling maintenance confirms that postclassical Greek had a normative orthographic culture; but spelling patterns also show that these are not the Classical conventions applied in the past. Some postclassical norms can be (partly) reconstructed emergently from variant distribution. This is useful to complement discussion of normativity by ancient metalinguistic sources, since it can be difficult to determine to what extent writers of documentary papyri shared the same concepts of norm as surviving grammatical material.</p> <br> <p>This thesis emphasises the importance of proportional variation in papyrus Greek. It also explores variant co-occurrence as a way of identifying spellers likely to produce progressive and / or contact-influenced morphosyntax. It includes recommendations for improving the encoding and linguistic searchability of digital papyrus editions. For corpus linguists, this thesis innovates in exploring co-occurrence at character rather than collocation level.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:8b9f8336-2378-451e-849b-2af5d2eaedfe2024-07-11T15:17:37ZSpelling variation in Greek letters from Oxyrhynchus, 50-350 ADThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:8b9f8336-2378-451e-849b-2af5d2eaedfeSpelling errorsGreek language, Hellenistic (300 B.C.-600 A.D.)Corpora (linguistics)Historical linguisticsGreek language--historyEnglishHyrax Deposit2024Smith, WBenaissa, ABaron, A<p>Postclassical Greek is well-attested. Over 4.5 million words survive in over 80,000 published Greek papyri, making papyrus (=reed) texts valuable for studying language variation and change. Because papyri survive direct, that variation includes variation in spelling.</p> <br> <p>Past work has used this to reconstruct sound change. But focusing exclusively on phonological reconstruction misses sociolinguistic information conveyed by spelling, and ignores that spelling variation has non-phonological as well as phonological drivers. Phonological approaches can run into uncertainty because of long-term contact between Greek and Egyptian between c. 300 BC–800 AD. Unexamined assumptions about linguistic normativity also mean spelling is overemphasised when evaluating contact phenomena.</p> <br> <p>This thesis therefore focuses on non-phonological motives influencing spelling variation. It adopts a dual-route model of spelling and adapts methods from corpus linguistics, especially of historical English, to quantify and describe spelling patterns in a coherent dataset of 771 papyrus letters from Oxyrhynchus dated between 50–350 AD. An emergent, evaluation-free approach allows the thesis to identify and contextualise patterns missed by prior error-based work. It shows that non-phonological variation patterns appear even in texts written by atypically variable spellers. Such spelling maintenance confirms that postclassical Greek had a normative orthographic culture; but spelling patterns also show that these are not the Classical conventions applied in the past. Some postclassical norms can be (partly) reconstructed emergently from variant distribution. This is useful to complement discussion of normativity by ancient metalinguistic sources, since it can be difficult to determine to what extent writers of documentary papyri shared the same concepts of norm as surviving grammatical material.</p> <br> <p>This thesis emphasises the importance of proportional variation in papyrus Greek. It also explores variant co-occurrence as a way of identifying spellers likely to produce progressive and / or contact-influenced morphosyntax. It includes recommendations for improving the encoding and linguistic searchability of digital papyrus editions. For corpus linguists, this thesis innovates in exploring co-occurrence at character rather than collocation level.</p>
spellingShingle Spelling errors
Greek language, Hellenistic (300 B.C.-600 A.D.)
Corpora (linguistics)
Historical linguistics
Greek language--history
Smith, W
Spelling variation in Greek letters from Oxyrhynchus, 50-350 AD
title Spelling variation in Greek letters from Oxyrhynchus, 50-350 AD
title_full Spelling variation in Greek letters from Oxyrhynchus, 50-350 AD
title_fullStr Spelling variation in Greek letters from Oxyrhynchus, 50-350 AD
title_full_unstemmed Spelling variation in Greek letters from Oxyrhynchus, 50-350 AD
title_short Spelling variation in Greek letters from Oxyrhynchus, 50-350 AD
title_sort spelling variation in greek letters from oxyrhynchus 50 350 ad
topic Spelling errors
Greek language, Hellenistic (300 B.C.-600 A.D.)
Corpora (linguistics)
Historical linguistics
Greek language--history
work_keys_str_mv AT smithw spellingvariationingreeklettersfromoxyrhynchus50350ad