The phonology of the open back vowels of the English language has undergone changes both overall and with regional variations, through Old and Middle English to the present. The sounds heard in modern English were significantly influenced by the Great Vowel Shift, as well as more recent developments in some dialects such as the cotâÂÂcaught merger.
In the Old English vowel system, the vowels in the open back area were unrounded: . There were also rounded back vowels of mid-height: . The corresponding spellings were and , with the length distinctions not normally marked; in modern editions of Old English texts, the long vowels are often written , .
As the Old English (OE) system developed into that of Middle English (ME), the OE short vowel merged with the fronted to become a more central ME . Meanwhile, the OE long vowel was rounded and raised to ME . OE short remained relatively unchanged, becoming a short ME vowel regarded as , while OE long became ME (a higher vowel than ). Alternative developments were also possible; see English historical vowel correspondences for details.
Later, ME open syllable lengthening caused the short vowel to be normally changed to in open syllables. Remaining instances of the short vowel also tended to become lower. Hence in Late Middle English (around 1400) the following open back vowels were present, distinguished by length:
By 1600, the following changes had occurred:
There were thus two open back monophthongs:
and one open back diphthong:
By 1700, the following further developments had taken place:
That left the standard form of the language with four open back vowels:
From the 18th century on, the following changes have occurred:
This leaves RP with three back vowels:
and General American with two:
In a few varieties of English, the vowel in lot is unrounded, pronounced toward []. This is found in the following dialects:
There's also evidence for it in South East England as early as the late 16th century and as late as the 19th century.
Linguists disagree as to whether the unrounding of the lot vowel occurred independently in North America (probably occurring around the end of the 17th century) or was imported from certain types of speech current in Britain at that time.
In such accents outside of North America, lot typically is pronounced as , therefore being kept distinct from the vowel in palm, pronounced or . However, the major exception to this is North American English, where the vowel is lengthened to merge with the vowel in palm, as described below. This merger is called the merger or more commonly the fatherâÂÂbother merger. (See further below.)
The fatherâÂÂbother merger is a phonemic merger of the lexical sets and . It represents unrounded lot, as detailed above, taken a step further. On top of being unrounded, the length distinction between the vowel in lot and bother and the vowel in palm and father is lost, so that the two groups merge. This causes father and bother to become rhymes.
This occurs in the great majority of North American accents; of the North American dialects that have unrounded lot, the only notable exception to the merger is New York City English, where the opposition with the -type vowel is somewhat tenuous.
Examples of possible homophones resulting from the merger include Khan and con () as well as Saab and sob ().
While the accents in northeastern New England, such as the Boston accent, also remain unmerged among older speakers, lot remains rounded and merges instead with cloth and thought.