Inversion was used only in
questions and for
emphasis.
Negation
In
OE the
common word for negation was ne (IE origin). It was simply placed before a word that was to be negated:
e.g. OE
Ne can ic (“I don’t know”, or literally “Not know I”).
As a result of this position before a word the particle
ne often
fused with:
a verb (e.g. OE nis ← ne is; næs ← ne wæs; næfde ← ne hæfde (had), etc);
a numeral (e.g. OE nān ← ne an (none));
a pronoun (e.g. OE nic ← ne ic (not me));
an adverb (e.g. OE nēfre ← ne āfre (never)).
Multiple negation was perfectly normal:
e.g. OE
Nis nān wisdom ne nān rēad naht onean God. – “There is no knowledge concerning God.”
Often the particle
ne was
strengthened by the particle
naht.
In ME particle ne fell out of use and was replaced completely by the particle naht that later developed into not, stood manly after a verb (V + not) and negated it:
e.g.
I fell to earth I knew not where.
In NE, during the Normalisation Period, no-double-negation rule appeared that prohibited more than one negative word in a sentence.
The history of words throws light on the history of the speaking community and its contacts with other people.