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3.8.6.2. Weak Verbs

In ME there were only 2 classes of weak verbs. The 3-rd class was already extinct. The former verbs of the 3-rd class either joined the other classes or became irregular, e.g. ME liven < OE libban (NE live) joined class 1. ME haven < OE habban (NE have) and ME seyen < OE secʒan (NE say) became irregular.

ME verbs of the 1-st class took the ending -de in the past and the ending -ed in the past participle.

The OE suffixes -ode, -od in the verbs of the 2-nd class were reduced to -ede, -ed.

Consequently, the only difference between the two classes of weak verbs was the presence or absence of the element -e- before the dental suffix in the past tense form.

In Late ME the vowel -e- was lost. As a result, the distinctions between different classes of weak verbs disappeared.

A few verbs of the 1-st class, which had had the suffixes -ede, -ed in OE (verbs with a short root vowel followed by r like nerian-nerede-nered), were included into the 2-nd class in ME.

Changes of the Basic Forms of Weak verbs in Middle English and Early New English

Classs

Period

Infinitive

Past

Past Participle

1

OE

dēman

dēmde

dēmed

ME

deemen

deemde

deemed

NE

deem

deemed

deemed

1

OE

styrian

styrede

styred

2

ME

stiren

stirede

stired

NE

stir

stirred

stired

2

OE

lōcian

lōcode

lōcod

ME

looken

lookede

looked

NE

look

looked

looked

ME weak verbs served as the source of modern standard (regular) verbs. The infinitive ending -en was unstable and soon was lost. The suffix of the past tense -ede and the suffix of the past participle -ed were reduced to -ed and the two forms became homonymous.

Infinitive

Past

Past participle

love(n)

loved(e)

loved

The dental suffix –d /-t turned out to be very productive. All the borrowed and newly built verbs in ME and in NE built their past tense and past participle on the pattern of weak verbs: skate, die, call (of Scandinavian origin), assist, charm (of French origin), execute (of Latin origin).

A few weak verbs adopted strong forms, e.g. the weak verb wear (class 1) acquired new forms by analogy with the strong verbs bear, tear (class 4). Many former strong verbs began to build weak forms alongside strong ones; the strong forms later fell into disuse, e.g. sleepen, wepen (class 7). Chaucer uses two parallel forms for the past of sleepen and wepen: sleep-slepte, weep-wepte.

Some verbs is a mixture of the two types, strong and weak, e.g. OE scēawian (weak verb of class 2) has adopted the suffix -n in the past participle from the strong conjugation, though its past tense has remained weak: NE show, showed, shown.