One advantage of this paradigm approach is that we can see clearly
what it means to say that a noun belongs to this declension. It is the fact
that all nouns of this declension, and only nouns of this declension, share
exactly the same set of inflections. There is quite a lot resting on this
claim, as we shall see. For example, there is
a fair number of nouns which
follow the pattern of
sta¯n in every respect except that they have a final
-e in the nominative-accusative singular, e.g.
cyme ‘arrival’. Historically
these nouns originate from an different declension which still existed
at the earliest stages of the language. Rather than maintaining that this
other declension survived, which could only
be claimed at the expense
of massive complication, what we do is suggest that this
-e was part of the
stem, and it was deleted before any following vowel. Thus the genitive
singular form
cyme would actually result from the structure
cyme+es with
deletion of the final
-e of the stem.
A further sub-group, best represented by
here ‘army’,
shows a wide
range of forms, for example
here,
here,
herig
.
es ~ herg
.
es ~ heres,
herig
.
e ~
herg
.
e here and plural forms such as
herig
.
eas ~ herg
.
eas ~ heras and others.
Originally, here too, such a noun belonged to another declension, but
what we can witness as the language changes is the growing tendency of
such a noun to follow the general masculine declension and to lose the
older forms. So both the examples we have just
discussed demonstrate
simplification of the declensional system.
Let us now turn our attention to the General Neuter declension. As
can be seen from the evidence in Chapter 2, this declension is only
marginally distinct from the general masculines. Not surprisingly, there-
fore, it too has some nouns with a stem-final
-e and such nouns follow,
where there are no distinctions between the two declensions, exactly
the
same pattern as nouns such as cyme; a typical example would be
wı¯te
‘punishment’.
But in the case of the neuters I have so far ignored another important
issue. For the paradigm I presented in Chapter 2, although it is correct,
does not tell the whole story. Alongside a noun such as
sc
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