- •1№ 1. Germanic languages: their history & classification
- •Table. The classification of old & modern Germanic languages.
- •2. The common features of germanic languages
- •In phonetics:
- •In grammar:
- •In lexis:
- •3. The chronological division of the history of English.
- •4 The Scandinavian invasion and its effect on English.
- •5. Norman Conquest and its effect on English
- •6. The dialectial situation of english
- •Old English Dialects
- •7. Principal oe and me written records
- •8. Spelling changes in me
- •9. Oe sound system
- •Palatal Mutation/I-Umlaut
- •Velar Consonants in Early Old English. Growth of New Phonemes
- •10. Monophthongs in the history of english
- •Qualitative vowel changes in early middle english
- •11. Dipthongs
- •12.Consonant changes in the history of english.
- •Treatment of Fricative Consonants in me and Early ne
- •13. Form-building means in the histoey of english
- •14. Old english noun system
- •15. The Simplification of the Noun Declension in English
- •16. The development of personal pronouns in the history of English.
- •17 The Development of the Adjective
- •18.The development of demonstrative pronouns in the history of English .(Dem pron, their categories , declentions, the decay of declentions & gramm. Categ in Middle e, the rise of articles.)
- •19. The oe verb, its grammatical categories and morphological types.
- •Grammatical Categories oF the Finite Verb
- •20. Old English weak verbs and their further development
- •21. Strong verbs
- •22. Preterite-present and anomalous
- •23. Changes in the verb conjugation
- •25. Verbals in the history of English
- •Development of the Gerund
- •24. The rise of analytical forms in verbal system in me.
- •Category of Voice. Passive
- •Perfect Forms.
- •Interrogative and Negative Forms with do (ne)
- •26. Causes of Grammatical Changes
- •27. Oe syntax
- •28. English syntax.
- •29 Old English Vocabulary
- •30 Word-Formation in Old English
- •31. Borrowings Конспект French and Scandinavian Borrowings in English
Table. The classification of old & modern Germanic languages.
|
East Germanic |
North Germanic |
West Germanic |
Old Germanic languages
|
Gothic (4th c) Vandalic Burgundian
|
Old Norse (2nd – 3rd c.) Old Icelandic (12th c.) Old Norwegian (13th c.) Old Danish (13th c.) Old Swedish (13th c.) |
Old English (7th c.) Old Saxon (9th c.) Old High German (8th c.) Old Dutch (12th c.) |
Modern Germanic languages |
No living languages |
Icelandic – archaic, the most difficult Norwegian Danish (Denmark, Greenland) Swedish Faroese (Faro islands, 50.000 people) |
English German Netherlandish Afrikaans (south Africa, Namibia) Yiddish (appeared on the basis of the German dialect) Frisian (part of Netherlands and Germany, islands of the North Sea) |
2. The common features of germanic languages
Old German languages show differences in comparison with other European Lang on 3 main linguistic levels: grammatical, phonetic and lexical.
In phonetics:
accent (word stress) in IE was characterized by free and musical accent (fixed & unfixed) ; in PG accent became fixed on the root syllable and dynamic, strong (силовое); characteristics of musical accent disappeared in Gmc languages
Indo-European (Non-Germanic) |
Proto-Germanic |
|
1. free stress (movable, i.e. can appear in any part of a word (root, prefix, suffix)); |
1. fixed stress (can’t move either in form- or word-building and is usually placed on root or prefix); |
|
2. pitch stress (musical) |
2. dynamic stress (force, breath stress) |
|
E.g.: русский |
E.g.: German |
English |
б`елый |
`Liebe |
`white |
белизн`а |
`lieben |
`whiteness |
белов`атый |
`lieberhaft |
`whitish |
бел`ить |
ge`liebt |
`whitewash |
The Proto-Germanic type of stress led to the formation of the following peculiarities of the Germanic languages as compared to non-Germanic Indo-European languages:
phonetic – as a result of the fixed position of the stress the unstressed syllables were becoming weaker and weaker, they got less distinct and neutral sounds (such as “schwa”) appeared;
morphological – as a result of the fact that the stress was fixed on the root and the syllables following the root were always unstressed and weak, many Germanic languages began to lose suffixes and grammatical endings (all the vocalic endings) and became ANALYTICAL LANGUAGES.
Grimm’s and Verner’s laws.
Grimm’s law: The first Germanic consonant shifts took place in the V-II cent. BC. Jacobs Grimm’s Law in 1822. According to Grimm, he classified consonant correspondences between indoeuropean and germanic stops (plosives).
There are 3 acts of this law:
IE voiceless plosives p, t, k correspond to Gmc voiceless fricatives f, Ө, h. Eg: пламя – flame, три – three, кардио – heart.
IE voiced plosives b, d, g, →Gmc voiceless fricatives p, t, k. Eg: болото - pool, kardia – heart, ego – ic (ik).
IE aspirated voiced plosives bh, dh, gh →to voiced plosives without aspiration b d g. Eg: bhrāta – brother, rudhira – red, ghostis – guest.
The second consonant shift was Carl Verner’s law (only in Old High German). According C.Verner all the common Gmc consonants became voiced in intervocalic position if the preceding vowel was unstressed (a change takes place in the course of time).
p-f > v septem
t-Ө > đ, d сто – hund (OE)
k-x > j, g
s-s > z/r auris – ēare
Consonant Correspondences |
Latin |
OE |
ModE |
||
1. [p, t, k] voiceless stops/plosives |
[f, , h] voiceless fricatives |
[v, ð/d, g] voiced fricatives |
septem |
seofen |
seven |
pater |
fæđer |
father |
|||
socrus |
swaiho(Gothic) |
Schwager(Germ) |
|||
2. Rhotacism |
ausis (Lithuanian) |
Auso (Gothic) |
ear, Ohr (Germ) |
||
[s] |
[z] |
[r] |
|||
Devoicing took place in early common Gmc when the stress was not yet fixed on the root.
A variety of Verner’s law is rhotacism (greek letter rho). [s] →[z]→[r] we find traces of this phenomenon in form of the verb to be →was – were, is – are; ist – sind – war.
II consonant shift occurd in dialects of sothern Gmc. Eg: еда – eat – essen, вода – water – wasser, hope – hoffen, bed – bett.
Ch (G) → C (OE) : reich – ricostan.
Palatal Mutation/i-Umlaut
Mutation – a change of one vowel to another one under the influence of a vowel in the following syllable.
Palatal mutation (or i-Umlaut) happened in the 6th -7th c. and was shared by all Old Germanic Languages, except Gothic. I-mutation is a change of root back vowels to front ones or root open vowels to closer ones under the influence of i/j in the next syllable.
Palatal mutation – fronting and raising of vowels under the influence of [i] and [j] in the following syllable (to approach the articulation of these two sounds). As a result of palatal mutation:
[i] and [j] disappeared in the following syllable sometimes leading to the doubling of a consonant in this syllable;
new vowels appeared in OE ([ie, y]) as a result of merging and splitting:
before palatal mutation |
after palatal mutation |
Gothic |
OE |
a o æ |
e |
badi |
bedd (bed) |
a: |
æ: |
dails |
dælan (deal) |
ŏ/ō |
ĕ/ē |
mōtjan |
mētan (meet) |
ŭ/ū |
ŷ/ỹ (labialised) (new!) |
fulljan |
fyllan (fill) |
ĕă/ēā ĕŏ/ēō |
ĭě/īē (new!) |
eald (early OE) |
ieldra (late OE) |
Traces of i-Umlaut in Modern English:
irregular Plural of nouns (man – men; tooth – teeth);
irregular verbs and adjectives (told ←tell; sold ←sell; old – elder);
word-formation with sound interchange (long – length; blood – bleed).
