element such as
-dom is often referred to as a
suffixoid because of its
rather intermediate status. Other possible suffixoids include
-had ‘hood’,
-lac with a rather general meaning of ‘act’ or ‘state’, as in
re¯aflac ‘robbery’,
that is ‘act of robbing’, similarly
-ræden in
campræden ‘fighting’ from
campian ‘fight’. There are adjectival suffixoids too, for example
-fæst and
-least.
Compounds where the head is a verb show a striking contrast with
present-day English, although not, it should be pointed out, with either
Dutch or German. For here a concept
I have already mentioned, namely
that of separable and inseparable verbs, comes into play. In compound
verbs the modifying element is either an adverb or a preposition. Thus
we find examples such as
æfterfolgian ‘pursue’. That seems simple enough,
but I should emphasise the importance of understanding
the difference
between these two types of verb, as outlined above.
But compare
oferfeohtan ‘conquer’ and
for
†
brengan ‘bring forth’ when,
for instance, they occur with
to¯ ‘in order to’: what we find is
to¯ oferfeohtanne
but
for
†
to¯ brenganne. If,
as is the case with for
†
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