Lecture 1 Introduction



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Лекции по истории английского

Pers.

Case

Number

Singular

Plural

Dual

1st

Nom

ic



wit

Gen

min

ūre

uncer

Dat



ūs

unc

Acc

mec/mē

ūsic

uncit

2nd

Nom

þu*

ζē*

ζit

Gen

þin

ēower

incer

Dat

þe

ēow*

inc

Acc

þec/þe

ēowic

incit


Pers.

Case

Gender, Number

M, Sg

F, Sg

N, Sg

Plural

3rd

Nom

hē*

hēo/hīo*

hit*

hēo/hīe*

Gen

his

hire

his

hira

Dat

him

hire

him

him

Acc

hine

hīe

hit

hēo/hīe

Later the following changes happened to the personal pronouns (some of them are marked with * in the table above so that one can trace the connection easily):





  1. Gender

Gender is still preserved (he, she, it) in ModE but is often denied by scholars because it is expressed lexically and practically has nothing to do with grammar.



  1. Cases:

    • In ME the Genitive Case turned into a new class of pronounsPossessive Pronouns (e.g. ModE I (pers.) – mine (possess.); you – yours, he – his, she – her, etc.);

    • The Dative and the Accusative Cases fell together and formed the Objective Case. Thus in ME there were only two cases left in the personal pronouns – Nominative and Objective (e.g. ModE I (Nom) – me (Obj); he – him, she – her, etc.).




  1. Number

Dual forms disappeared in ME. In NE the category of Number disappeared in the 2nd person of the personal pronouns (see the explanation below).



  1. 3rd person

As far as in the Early ME many forms in the 3rd person coincided phonetically and often caused confusion and difficulties in communication, the following changes occurred:



Pers.

Gender

OE

Early ME

Late ME

Comments

3rd

M, Sg



he

he

preserved original form

F, Sg

hēo/hīo

he

she

As far as it coincided with M, Sg and Plural forms, a new word was found – derived from the demonstrative pronoun sēo (F, Sg, Nom) – to distinguish the forms.

N, Sg

hit

hit

it

preserved original form, lost initial [h]

Plural

hēo/hīe

he/hi

they

As far as it coincided with M, Sg and F, Sg forms, a new word was found – a Scandinavian borrowing – to distinguish the forms.




  1. 2nd person




Pers.

Number

OE

ME

Comments

NE

2nd

Sg

þu

thou

Fell out of use due to the French etiquette (it forbade impolite “thou” form, so it was replaced with the polite “ēow” form).

ēow (Pl, Dat)(you)

Pl

ζē

ye

Coincided phonetically with  was dropped

Thus in NE the category of Number disappeared in the 2nd person of the personal pronouns.


Lecture 18
The Development of the Verb

See Lecture 14 for the categories of the Verb in OE.




Strong and Weak Verbs in Comparison



Basis for Comparison

Strong Verbs

Weak Verbs

Number

300

900

Type/Origin

Indo-European (reveals suppletivity)

Germanic (reveals dental suffix)

Formation of Past Tense forms

by changing the root-vowel (ablaut):
sittan (Infinitive) – sæt (Past Indefinite)
(verb “to sit”)

with the help of the dental suffix -t/-d:
līcian (Infinitive) – līcode (Past Indefinite)
(verb “to like”)

Formation of Participle2 forms

with the help of the suffix –en (+ sometimes root-vowel interchange):
findan (Infinitive) – funden (Participle 2)
(verb “to find”)

with the help of the dental suffix -t/-d:
cēpan (Infinitive) – cēped (Participle 2)
(verb “to keep”)

Derivation

Strong verbs were root-words/non-derivatives (i.e. they were not derived from some other words/roots but were the words/roots from which other words were derived)

Weak verbs were derivatives from nouns, adjectives, strong verbs:
tellan (to tell) ← talu (a tale)
fyllan (to fill) ← fyll (full)
fandian (to find out) ← findan (to find)

Productivity

unproductive type (no new words employed this type of form-building)

productive type (new words that appeared employed this type of form-building)

Principle Forms

Infinitive Past Sg Past Pl Participle 2
wrītan – wrāt – writon – writen

Infinitive Past Participle 2
cēpan – cēpte – cēped

Classes

subdivided into 7 classes

subdivided into 3 classes



Strong Verbs and their Development

  1. As far as the strong verbs were a non-productive class, some strong verbs turned into weak with time, i.e. started to employ -t/-d suffix in their form-building (e.g. to climb, to help, to swallow, to wash, etc.). Thus in NE only 70 strong verbs out of 300 in OE remained.

  2. The strong verbs were subdivided into 7 classes according to the type of vowel gradation/ablaut.

The classes that survived best through different periods of the history were classes 1, 3, 6:



Class 1

Infinitive

Past Sg

Past Pl

Participle 2

OE

wrītan

wrāt

writon

writen

ME

writen

wrot

writen

writen

NE

write

wrote

written




Class 3

Infinitive

Past Sg

Past Pl

Participle 2

OE

findan

fand

fundon

funden

ME

finden

fand

founden

founden

NE

find

found

found




Class 6

Infinitive

Past Sg

Past Pl

Participle 2

OE

scacan

scoc

scōcon

scacen

ME

shaken

shook

shoken

shaken

NE

shake

shook

shaken

Analysing the tables above, we can see that the following changes occurred:



    • In ME the inflections -an, -on, -en were all reduced to just one inflection  -en.

    • In NE the ending -n was lost in the Infinitive and preserved in the Participle 2 in order to distinguish these two forms.

    • In NE Past Singular and Past Plural forms were unified, usually with the Singular form preferred as a unified form because Past Plural and Participle 2 often had similar forms and it was hard to distinguish them (e.g. ME writen (Past Pl) – writen (Part. 2)) the category of Number disappeared in the Verb.

In ModE the subdivision into classes was lost though we still can trace some peculiarities of this or that class in the forms of the irregular verbs.



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