
- •Introductory lecture The History of the English language-Subject and the aims of the History of the English language.
- •Lecture 1 The Origin of the English Language
- •The Anglo-Saxon Conquest
- •Formation of Germanic States in Britain
- •The Writing and the Written monuments of oe
- •The Three Periods in the History of the English Language
- •Phonetic Structure of the oe Vowels
- •The Ablaut (Gradation)
- •Mutation (umlaut)
- •Monophtongs
- •Diphtongs
- •Lengthening of vowels
- •Palatalization
- •Palatalization of consonants
- •Other changes and loss of consonants
- •Lecture4 The Grammar Structure of Old English
- •Morphology. Nouns
- •The Strong Declension of Nouns
- •The weak declension of nouns
- •A separate group of nouns.
- •Old English Adjectives
- •Old English Pronouns
- •Lecture5 The Old English Verb
- •Infinitive Past Past Second
- •Indef. Past Indef. Sing. Past Indef. Plural Past Participle
- •The conjugation of verbs
- •Strong verbs
- •Preterite - present verbs
- •Lecture6 old english syntax
- •The meaning of case forms
- •The usage of pronouns
- •Indicative Subjunctive Imperative Indicative Subjunctive
- •The category of mood in oe
- •Lecture 7 Historical change The reason for studying historical change
- •The importance of text analysis
- •The Middle English Period
- •Lexical influence of the French language
- •The formation of the English national language
- •Lecture 8 Phonetic changes in me
- •Consonant changes
- •Spelling changes in the period after the Norman Conquest
- •General view of the me sound system
- •Lecture 9 Middle English Morphology
- •Middle English Pronouns
- •The demonstrative pronouns
- •Middle English Verbs
- •Lecture 10 Middle English Syntax
- •Lecture 11 The Modern English Period The formation of the English national language
- •Phonetic changes. Vowels.
- •Consonants
- •Voicing and Voiceless Fricatives.
- •Loss of Consonants in Clusters.
- •Loss of consonants in initial clusters
- •Lecture 12 Grammatical changes.
- •Morphology. The Substantive.
- •Interrogative
- •Impersonal and Personal Constructions.
The conjugation of verbs
The OE verb has 2 tenses: the Present tense and the Past tense, three moods: the Indicative, the Subjunctive and the Imperative. There are also the verbals -the infinitive and the first and second participles.
Strong verbs
We will illustrate the conjugation of some types of strong verbs.
Wrītan (write) Singular
Present Present t Past Past
Indicative Subjunctive Imperative Indicative Subjunctive
1. write write ----- wrāt write
2. writest, wrītst write writ write write
3. writeƥ, wrīt write _ wrät write
Plural
writaƥ written writaƥ writon writen
Infinitive Participle
wrītan First Second
Dat*. tō writende (wrītanne) wrītende (3e) written
(*Every infinitive can have a dative case used with the preposition tō).
Preterite - present verbs
Preterite - Present verbs have a peculiar place within the system of OE. Their present tense corresponds to the past of strong verbs, while their past is derived according to the past of weak verbs. Thus, in OE the present tense of the verb witan (know) is wät for the singular and witon for the plural, while its past is wisse or wiste. Its present thus corresponds to the past of class I strong verbs (compare räs -rison), while its past is derived on the pattern of weak verbs (wisse < witte).
These verbs appeared as the result of some forms of the Past Indefinite singular of strong verbs having been understood as Present Indefinite forms, e. g there existed a strong l class verb: witan - wat - witon - witen. The Past Indefinite Singular was understood as the Present Indefinite form. The new verbs which came into existence in this way were defective from the very beginning because they had no Infinitive of their own, sometimes they had no Participle forms. The Past Indefinite forms of these new verbs were formed by means of dental suffixes:
1. wāt wisse (wiste)
2. wast wissest
3. wāt wisse
Plural witon wisson
Lecture6 old english syntax
The order of words in OE
The meaning of case forms.
The usage of pronouns.
Tense forms in OE.
The category of mood in OE.
OE was a synthetical language: the relations between the words in a sentence were expressed by means of flexions. The order of words in a sentence was not as strict as it is now. The words were rather free to change their places without causing any changes in the meaning of a whole sentence. In general if the sentence was not interrogative, the order of words was direct, the subject preceded the predicate or the predicate group.
Stræt wæs stãn - fãh - улица была вымощена разноцветными камнями.
In interrogative sentences the rule is that predicate comes first, as in the following examples: Eart ƥū sē Bēowulf, sepe wiƥ Brecan wunne? (Art thou the Bëowulf pwho competed with Breca?)
Sometimes when there was a secondary member at the beginning of the sentence, the order of words could be indirect; [θ] ƥã ãrãs hê from ƥæm slæpe -тогда восстал он ото сна. Sometimes the order of words was indirect though there was no secondary member: Lixte sê lêoma (Засверкал свет). In some cases however the order of words was direct even if there was a secondary member at the beginning of the sentence Nū ic suna mīnun syllan wolde 3ūƥ3ewædu -Теперь я сыну моему дал бы боевые доспехи. In some written monuments of OE especially in poetry the so-called «synthetic» order of words can be met with. It’s the order of words on which between the subject and the predicate there stand many secondary members of the sentence. This synthetic order of words is very typical of «Beowulf» in which in 70% of the order of words are synthetic:
Wē ƥæt ellen - weorc ēstum miclum feohtan fremedon (Мы этот подвиг с большой готовностью, бой совершили).