Coincidentally, however, I just happened to be reading some poems by Greville, and in one (XCIV) he specifically writes flow'rs. Greville makes a point of using apostrophes when his metre demands it - so for instance the -ed ending is usually <ed>, and presumably /@d/, except where the metre requires <'d>, presumably /d/. This seems strongly to suggest to me that, for Greville, the disyllabic pronunciation of "flower" is at least known, and probably the standard, otherwise he wouldn't have bothered specifically noting the absence of the second syllable in this poem - he's not a writer who just throws in apostrophes wherever a vowel has dropped out regularly.Travis B. wrote: ↑Mon Nov 26, 2018 10:56 amI just looked that up and it's true. It seems the monosyllabic pronunciation is the older one, and the disyllabic one is the innovation. But yes, spelling pronunciation has definitely reinforced the two separate pronunciations.Pabappa wrote: ↑Mon Nov 26, 2018 10:45 am Which is interesting because etymologically they're the same word even in English. Spelling pronunciation can be subtle. I have them the same, but i think if someone said the word in isolation i would be able to guess which one they meant from intonation. As is the case with wood/would.
Greville* is apparently believed to have "started" his cycle in the 1580s, and must have finished it before he died in 1628, suggesting that the disyllabic pronunciation must have developed rather quickly in Early Modern English (Greville's generally a conservative writer in his diction, I think). So it may be an 'innovation', but it's not a recent one!
*Fulke Greville, later 1st Baron Brooke; 1554-1628. Chancellor of the Exchequer and poet.