- •II.Lectures Lecture 1
- •I. Origin of English
- •II. Problem of division into periods.
- •III. Early History of British Isles
- •IV. Traces of the Roman Rule in Britain
- •V. The Anglo-Saxon Conquest of Britain
- •VI. Scandinavian conquerors
- •VII. Norman conquest of England
- •Chronological List
- •1. Origin of English.
- •4. Traces of the Roman rule in Britain.
- •Middle English Dialects
- •Vocabulary of Middle English Period.
- •Rising of London dialect.
- •Book printing.
- •Forming national language (15-17 c.)
- •Spreading of English outside England. English in Scotland
- •Phonetic changes. Oe Fracture (Breaking),
- •Borrowings of oe period.
- •I. Middle English Alphabet.
- •II. Changes in Spelling Habits .
- •III. Changes in Consonants.
- •IV. Phonetic Changes. Vowels.
- •V. Types of me Literary Documents
- •I. Spreading of London dialect in the 15th century.
- •II. Phonetic changes
- •1. The Vowel Shift
- •2. Influence of "r"
- •3. Special cases
- •4. Other changes
- •III. Phonetic Changes. Consonants.
- •1. Development of [h]
- •2. Loss of [l] before [k,m,f,V]
- •3. [J] Merged with Preceding Consonant.
- •I. Old English period. Nouns.
- •1. Preliminary remarks
- •2. The categories of oe nouns
- •3. The category of declension
- •4. The System of Cases in oe period and types of Declension
- •II. Middle English Nouns
- •III. Case system in New English period
- •I.Strong Verbs.
- •II. Weak Verbs
- •IV. Categories of verbs in oe.
- •Conjugation of Verbs [kon’dzugei ∫ n]
- •VI. Me Verbs.
- •I. Oe Pronouns.
- •III. Oe Adjectives. Declension.
- •IV. Degrees of Comparison.
- •III. Seminars
- •Origin of English
- •1. Origin of English
- •Scandinavian Conquerors.
- •Additional information The Scandinavian Influence
- •IV. Oe Vocabulary oe vocabulary for
- •V. Tests
- •Variant II.
- •Variant III.
- •Variant IV.
- •VI. List of the examination questions in the English Language History
- •I. Theoretical problems.
- •Origin of English.
- •II. Practical problems.
- •Card № 1
- •Origin of English.
I. Old English period. Nouns.
1. Preliminary remarks
Hypotheses. Some scholars suppose that at first very vague part of speech “nomina” existed. In the course of time it split into the noun, the adjective and the pronoun. The noun was the most important part. OE was syntactical. It means that the relations between the words were denoted by grammatical flexions. The original structure of a noun in Germanic, as well as in other Indo-European languages presents itself as follows. A noun consists of three elements:
the root,
a stem-building suffix,
a case inflexion.
The meaning of the root is clear: it is the lexical meaning of a noun. The original structure of the case inflection is also clear: it expresses the relation between the thing denoted by noun and other things or actions, and also the category of number. The stem-building suffix is much more difficult to define, because this suffix has lost its meaning long before the written texts appeared.
2. The categories of oe nouns
In OE period the nouns had the category of gender, the category of number and cases (падежей). As for the category of gender, the nouns have a masculine gender, a feminine gender and a neuter gender. The cases of nouns in OE period were: Nominative Case, Genitive Case, Dative Case, and Accusative Case. The peculiarity of OE nouns was the availability of several types of declension. The type of declension depended on the stem-building suffix. In some words the stem-building suffix was combined with the root morpheme, in other words the stem-building suffix was combined with an ending. That’s why this stem-building suffix was not an individual or separate morpheme. It’s possible to find out the stem-building suffix, if one compares the forms of nouns in different Germanic languages. Let’s analyze the examples of Gothic words:
Wulf gast gib sunu
D. c. wulfam gastim gibon sunum
Ac. c. wulfans gastins gibōs sunus
As you can see from these examples, the ending of Dative case -is, -m and the ending of Accusative case is -ns. But stem-building suffix is not the same in these words. (The place of a stem-building suffix is between the root of the word and the ending of the word). The stem-building suffix in the word wulf is - a-; in gast – i; in gib - o; sunu - u -.
Let’s compare the Gothic word “wulf” and the Latin word “lupus” (and its earlier form was “lupos”). Between the root “lup” and ending “s” there is a stem-building suffix -o-. The stem-building suffix -o- in Gothic languages corresponds to the stem-building -a- in Germanic language. The fact is that Germanic stem-building suffix is a reflex of stem-building suffixes in Indo-European languages.
That is: Indo-European stems with -o- correspond to Germanic stems with -a-; and Indo-European stems with -a- correspond to Germanic stems with -o-.
Analyzing the examples which were given earlier, we can understand that word “wulf” is a noun with a stem-building suffix -a-, “gast” is a noun with stem-building suffix -i- and “gib” is a noun with a stem-building suffix -“u”-.