Добавил:
Upload Опубликованный материал нарушает ваши авторские права? Сообщите нам.
Вуз: Предмет: Файл:
Пособие Тихонова послед вариант.tmp.doc
Скачиваний:
51
Добавлен:
24.09.2019
Размер:
1.2 Mб
Скачать
    1. Grammatical peculiarities of germanic languages

It is the opinion of many scholars that the grammatical structure of the Old Germanic languages was, but for a few exceptions, similar to that of other old IE languages. They shared similar systems of parts of speech, similar categories of the noun, the verb, etc.

      1. The Noun

The structure of a noun is supposed to have been the same in all IE languages. Between the root and the ending (a case inflection) there was usually a stem-building suffix, e.g. the Gothic word sunus (E. son) consisted of three parts: the root sun -, the stem-building suffix u and the ending of the nominative singular-s. Thus, the stem of the word sunu ended in the sound -u and it is customary to speak in such cases of an u- stem. There were likewise a- stems, ō- stems, n- stems, etc.

The root carries the lexical meaning of the noun. The meaning of the stem-building suffix is much more difficult to define. Presumably, stem-building suffixes were a means of classifying nouns according to their meaning, but already in old Gothic texts they had no longer meaning at all. There was only one type of nouns in Gothic with a distinct semantic feature. These were nouns denoting relationship and derived by means of the stem-building suffix -r, e.g. Gt fadar, swistar.

In Gothic, we can single out the stem-building suffixes in several types of nouns in the Accusative and Dative plural. E.g.: the nouns dags (day), giba (gift), gasts (guest), sunus (son) have the following forms:

Acc. dag-a-ns, gib-ō-s, gast-i-ns, sun-u-ns

Dat. dag-a-m, gib-ō -m, gast-i-m, sun-u-m where a, ō, i, u originally were stem-building suffixes.

In Old Germanic there were 3 types of noun stems:

  1. vocalic stems: a, ō, i, u. Declension of these nouns has been called strong declension.

  2. consonantal stems: n, s, r. Declension of n-stem nouns is called weak declension.

  3. root-stems: these nouns never had a stem-building suffix so that case inflections were added directly to the root. The number of root-stems was comparatively small.

Later on this clear-cut structure of the noun in IE and especially in Germanic languages was blurred, the endings were often fused with the preceding suffixes, or they were lost altogether. E.g. The Russian word сын or the English son preserved neither the ending of the nominative singular nor the stem-building suffix. In the OE sunu (son) the last u was no longer felt as a stem-building suffix but rather as an ending. Still, linguists find it convenient to speak of the u-stem declension, a- stem declension, etc. even after the loss of the corresponding sounds.

Besides the features of Gc languages shared with other members of the IE family, they had certain peculiarities that marked them off as a separate branch. These are: (1) a special weak declension of adjectives, (2) a special weak conjugation of verbs.