An Introduction to Old English Edinburgh University Press



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.
‘eye’. Note also
that both feminines and neuters have -e in the nominative singular, and
neuters also have -e in the accusative singular.
If you feel uncomfortable with declensions, it is worth noting that you
could use the concept for present-day English too, although it is scarcely
THE BASIC ELEMENTS
17
02 pages 001-166 29/1/03 16:09 Page 17


needed. But you could talk about the s-declension, which would contain
the overwhelming majority of nouns; other, minor, declensions might
contain either only one member, such as ox, or only a few, such as the one
containing animal names such as deersheep.
I have not yet considered the General Feminine declension nouns.
The reason for this is that they have a somewhat different shape, histori-
cally. Whereas it should be clear that the general masculine and neuter
nouns are very closely related, this is not true of the feminines, as can be
seen from the following paradigm for talu ‘tale’:
Singular
Plural
Nom.
talu
tala
Acc.
tale
tala
Gen.
tale
tala
Dat.
tale
talum
This completes what we can call the major declensions of Old English.
As I shall discuss later, there are a number of variants of these declen-
sions. There are also some minor declensions, so called because although
they contain many important words they are not productive, that is to
say, new words entering the vocabulary fit into one of the four classes
above, rather than into any of the minor declensions. Of the four declen-
sions, the most frequent is the general masculine, with about thirty-five
per cent of nouns, whilst the general neuters and feminines account for
about twenty-five per cent each. In the N declension, which accounts for
the remainder, there are more masculines than feminines.
2.3 Demonstratives
One point which you may have noticed in the discussion above is that
case forms are often of little help in determining the function of a noun
in a sentence, and this can be seen without even having inspected any
real examples. It is observable from the fact that so many of the case
forms above are identical, not only from declension to declension, but
within declensions too. Look, for example, at how many forms of the
N declension are identical or note that similarly identical forms can be
found in the general feminine declension. Such facts play an important
role in the eventual loss of declensions, and gender, in English. But
in Old English the declensional system remains relatively intact. An
interesting question, therefore, is why that should be. It cannot be due
merely to the forces of inertia.
The answer is that the noun declension system was supported from
elsewhere in the system, in particular by the demonstrative system. Even
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AN INTRODUCTION TO OLD ENGLISH
02 pages 001-166 29/1/03 16:09 Page 18


more specifically, the Old English demonstrative se, which functioned
both as a demonstrative with the meaning ‘that’ and as the equivalent
to present-day English ‘the’, played a crucial role. Furthermore, this
demonstrative had a full range of case forms, except that there is no
gender distinction in the plural. Here is the paradigm of the demon-
strative:
Masculine
Neuter
Feminine
Plural
Nom.
se
t
æt
se¯o
t

Acc.
t
one
t
æt
t

t

Gen.
t
æs
t
æs
t
æ¯re
t
a¯ra
Dat.
t
æ¯m
t
æ¯m
t
æ¯re
t
æ¯m
A couple of footnotes are necessary here. Firstly, although I have marked
the length of the long vowels, this is variable, and they would shorten in
unemphatic contexts, just like demonstratives today. Secondly, demon-
stratives have an additional case, which is called the instrumental case.
It only shows itself in the masculine and neuter singular, having the
shape

. Elsewhere in the paradigm the dative form is used instead. The
instrumental is of mixed origin, but it suffices to say that in Old English
it is thoroughly confused with the dative which tends to replace it.
The most important point, however, remains the fact if what we may,
with some licence, call the definite article, is associated with a noun, then
the degree of uncertainty caused by the presence of a noun standing
alone is perceptibly diminished. This is true not only when the article
is present, but also when its counterpart 


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