Thread:User talk:Rua/Limburgish/reply (6)

For that I'd like to refer you to a-mutation and middle dutch: Retention of /u/ (did not merge with /o/) and /uː/ (remained as a back vowel). I believe ôo in general turns op as oea/oa/oeë/oe (or ou) instead of oo. As in doead (dead) vs. bloòd (blood) vs. kaore (corn) vs. boum (tree) vs. noót (nut). Strong verbs are an exception to this general change and become oo due to its plural having oo (*flaug > *vloôg > vloog, *flug- > vloge). Middle Dutch had a paradigm in which oô (singular) alternated with ō (plural/particle). In Limburgish the past tense oo alternates with the particle ao, which is the same as the pattern in Old English (flugon vs. flogen), with the exceptions in the singular.