5
Strong verbs
5.1 Present-day English
When we look at present-day English we find many verbs which pattern
in a very similar way to the weak verbs of Old English, even if there has
been some obvious simplification: for example
there are no longer two
major classes, for they have merged together, so that an Old English class
1 verb
cyssan ‘kiss’ and a class 2 verb such as
lufian ‘love’, now pattern in
parallel.
On the other hand
there are a number of verbs, other than any of
those I have discussed above, which do not show any of the distinguish-
ing features of a weak verb. In particular,
these verbs do not have the
characteristic past tense inflection of the weak verbs and, furthermore,
they show an apparently arbitrary variation in their stem in order to
indicate their past tense and participle forms. Such is what we find in a
verb such as
sing,
with past tense sang and past participle
sung.
In English today these verbs are often classed as irregular verbs, but
they are, in most cases, directly derivable from what are called the
strong
verbs of Old English. This rather implies that what now seems to be
a rather unpredictable variation in the
present-day language has not
always been so, and that, for example, the Old English verb
singan ‘sing’
had a predictable variation in form. Our first task, therefore, will be to
analyse the state of affairs in Old English and then to see how that might
help us to understand the present-day variations also.
5.2 Ablaut
In heading this section of Chapter 5
with the term Ablaut, I am
conscious that this will look like a reference back to Umlaut. There is,
indeed, a distant similarity, but that is best ignored. I use the German
term because the equivalent English one,
vowel gradation, is regrettably
clumsy.
02 pages 001-166 29/1/03 16:09 Page 54
The best way to approach Ablaut is by starting
with a present-day verb
like
sing. I have already shown that this verb has three basic shapes, which
we can display as a simple paradigm:
Dostları ilə paylaş: