
- •2. The common features of Germanic languages.
- •1. The old Germanic languages, their classification and principal features.
- •3. The chronological division of the history of English. General characteristics of each period.
- •4. The Scandinavian invasion and its effect on English.
- •5. The Norman Conquest and its effect on English.
- •6. The dialectal situation of English from a historical perspective.
- •7. Principal Old English and Middle English written record.
- •8. Major spelling changes in me.
- •12. Consonant changes in the history of English
- •9. The oe sound system. Vowel and consonant changes in Old English.
- •Loss of Consonants:
- •10. Monophthongs in the history of English.
- •11. Diphthongs in the history of English
- •14. The oe noun system.
- •15. The simplification of the noun declension in English
- •30. The main trends in word formation in history of English
- •16. The development of personal pronouns in the history of English.
- •17. The development of the adjective in history of English
- •18. The development of demonstrative pronouns in the history of English.
- •13. Form-building means in the history of English
- •19. Oe verbal system.
- •20.Weak verbs in oe & their further development.
- •21. Strong verbs in oe and their development.
- •22. Oe preterite-present verbs and anomalous verbs and their further development.
- •26. The causes of changes in the morphological system in me & ne. The origin of modern English regular and irregular noun forms.
- •23 .Changes in the verb conjugation in the history of English.
- •27. The principal features of oe syntax.
- •24. The rise of analytical forms within the verbal system in the history of English.
- •Formation
- •25. Verbals in the history of English
- •Infinitive
- •28. The main trends in the development of English syntax.
- •29. Oe vocabulary & its etymological characteristics.
- •31. Borrowings as a source of the replenishment of e vocabulary in me & ne.
24. The rise of analytical forms within the verbal system in the history of English.
In OE there were no analytical forms. They appeared later:
ME – Future Tense, Perfect, Passive and Subjunctive forms;
NE – Continuous and Do-forms;
They were exceptionally analytical. The analytical forms consist of several words having grammatical meaning.
Future tense: shall + inf – future action; willen + inf. Eg: wol ye maken assurance – will you make assurance.
The Passive Voice: beon +Part II → analytical forms to express state action. The wide use of passive constr. in the 18th – 19th cent → high productivity of the P.Voice.
Perfect forms: go down to 2 types of syntactical combination.
habbon (have) + Part II
bēon (be) + Part II
Eg: Ic habbe þonne bēsc getengenne – я имел ту рыбку пойманной.
In ME and NE only the auxiliary habban was left while bēon ceased to be used in the Perfect forms not to confuse them with the Passive forms.
Do-Forms
In NE “do-periphrasis” was used in the Past and Present of the Indicative Mood.
16th c. – “Do” was used in negative, affirmative and interrogative sentences and was freely interchangeable with the simple forms (without “do”), e.g.:
Heard you all this? = Did you hear all this?
I know not why he cries. = I don’t know why he cries.
He knew it. = He did know it (without any meaning of emphasis).
17th c. – “do” was left only in negative and interrogative sentences to keep the word-order S + P + O (e.g. I (S) pity (P) him (O). Do you (S) pity (P) him (O)?). In affirmative sentences “do” acquired an emphatic meaning (e.g. Did you really see him? – I did see him, I swear!).
Continuous Forms
Sometimes they were found in OE:
Formation
bēon + Participle 1
In OE it denoted a “quality”, was not limited in time (as it is in the ModE Continuous forms) e.g.:
Sēō eorðe is berende missenlīcra fuζela – This land bears many birds.
In ME Continuous forms fell into disuse.
In NE these forms reappeared together with a synonymous form:
be + Participle 1 = be + on/in + Gerund (indicated a process of limited duration)
e.g.:
He was on huntinge – He was hunting (literally, He was on hunting).
18th c. – Continuous forms became well-established.
25. Verbals in the history of English
Participle 1
The formation of the Participle 1 was as follows:
OE |
ME |
NE |
berende |
bering |
bearing |
In OE Participle I had only the form of the Active Voice, possessed the categories of Number, Gender, Case. It agreed with the noun in Number, Gender, Case.
In ME it lost its nominal and adjectival features together with the categories of Number, Gender, Case and became unchangeable.
Participle 2
As it has been mentioned in the table above, in OE Participle 2 was formed:
in strong verbs – with the help of the suffix –en (+ sometimes root-vowel interchange) + often marked by prefix зe-:
e.g. OE bindan (Infinitive) – зebunden (Participle 2) (to bind)
In ME prefix зe- was weakened to prefix i-/y- (e.g. ME y-runne (run, Part.2 from “to run”) and in NE it disappeared at all.
in weak verbs – with the help of the suffix -t/-d:
e.g. OE cēpan (Infinitive) – cēped (Participle 2) (to keep)
Participle 2, unlike Participle 1, had two meanings of the category of Voice:
OE |
NE |
|
Active Voice |
Passive Voice |
|
ζegān |
ζeboren |
gone, born |
Thus in OE Participle 2 had the forms of the Active and Passive Voice, possessed the categories of Number, Gender, Case. It agreed with the noun in Number, Gender, Case.
In ME it lost the category of Voice and the categories of Number, Gender, Case and became unchangeable.