
- •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.
Phonetic Structure of the oe Vowels
Short characteristic of OE vowels.
The ablaut (gradation).
Mutation (umlaut).
Fraction (fracture).
Lengthening of vowels.
Palatalization.
The OE vowels are divided into monophtongs and diphthongs both long and short: a æ e i o u y å ea eo ie io
ā ǣ ē ī ō ū ȳ ēā ēō īē īō
The OE vowels corresponded to the Old Germanic sounds which can be found in Gothic.
The sound [æ] was pronounced in OE as it is pronounced in MnE [æ] (a man, a hat). The sound [æ] was longer twice.
The sound [y] was pronounced as MnG [ü] in the word Mütter, [ȳ] was pronounced like the German [ü] in the word Gemüte.
[å] was found before the nasal consonants n and m and is sometimes denoted by the letter a, sometimes by o: mann, monn, ‘man’; nam, nom, ‘took’.
a corresponds to the Gothic a short. It usually stands in an open syllable followed by a back vowel:
da3as (days), caru (care), macian (to make). In closed syllables a occurs but very rare: habban ‘have’, wascan ‘wash’, asce ‘ash’.
ā can stand in any syllable and corresponds to the Gothic [ai]: stān ‘stone’ (Gothic stains), hātan ‘to hail, to call’ (Gothic haitan), cnāwan ‘to know’ (Gothic cnaiwan).
æ corresponds to the Gothic a. It is found in closed syllables, as in dæ3 ‘day’ contains a front vowel, as dæ3es ‘of the day’, wæter ‘water’ (Gothic watō).
ǣ has a twofold origin.
(1) ǣ1 corresponds to Gothic ē. It is found, for example, in the past plural of class IV and class V strong verbs: stǣlon ‘stole’ (Gothic stelum), bǣron ‘bore’ (Gothic berum), sprǣcon ‘poke’, «mǣton» ‘measured’, and also in other cases, as in dǣd ‘deed’ (Gothic deƥs). (2) ǣ is the result of i-umlaut of a, which corresponds to Gothik ai. It is found in a number of class I weak verbs: «hǣlan» ‘heal’ (Gothic hai ljam), «drǣfan» ‘drive’, «lǣfan» ‘leave’.
e also has a twofold origin: 1) it corresponds to Gothic i or e (pronounced [e] in the infinitive of class III, IV, and V strong verbs: helpan ‘help’ (Gothic hilpan), stelan ‘steal’ (Gothic stilan), beran ‘bear’ (Gothic bairan). 2) It results from i-mutation of a or æ, as in sen3ean ‘sing’, bendan ‘bend’.
ē is usually the result of i-mutation of o; it is often found in class I weak verbs: deman ‘judge’, cepan ‘keep’.
i may be of two qualities: stable and unstable. Stable i corresponds to the Gothic i. it is not confused with y. E.g.: bindan ‘bind’ (Gothic bindan), niman ‘take’ (Gothic niman).
Unstable i is the result of monophthongizing of the diphthong [ie] and is often substituted by [y], e.g. niht (nicht, nyht).
ī also has two qualities: stable and unstable. Stable ī corresponds to the Gothic ei (pronounced [ī]. It is found in class I strong verbs, as in wrītan ‘write’, bīdan ‘bide’, 3rīpan ‘catch’.
Unstable ī originated as the result of monophthongising of the diphthong ie and is sometimes substituted by ȳ, e.g. hī (hīe, hȳ) ‘they’;
o corresponds to the Gothic u or aú (pronounced [o], this vowel is met in Participle II of class II, III b, c, and IV strong verbs: coren ‘chosen’ (Gothic kusans), worden ‘become’ (Gothic wairƥans), stolen ‘stolen’ (Gothic stulans);
ō usually corresponds to the Gothic o 3ōd ‘good’ (Gothic gōƥs; it is found in the past tense of class VI strong verbs: scōc ‘shook, hlōh ‘laughed’.
u corresponds to the Gothic u or aú (pronounced [o]; it is found in the past plural of class II and III strong verbs, e. g. curon ‘chose’ (Gothic kusum), bindon ‘bound’ (Gothic bundum), hulpon ‘helped’ (Gothic hulpum)’ wurdon ‘became’ (Gothic waúrƥum);
ū corresponds to the Gothic ū e. g.: nū ‘now’, hūs (Gothic hūs) ‘house’ and occurs in the infinitive of a few class strong verbs: lūcan ‘lock’, bū3an ‘bend’;
å is originated from a before nasal consonants: monn ‘man’ (Gothic manna), hond ‘hand’ (Gothic handus);
ȳ may be of two qualities: stable and unstable. Stable ȳ is the result of i-mutation of ū as in mȳs ‘mice’, fyr ‘fire’.
Unstable ȳ is sometimes substituted by ī;
y can also be stable and unstable. Stable y results from i-mutation of u, as in 3ylden ‘golden’, wyllen ‘woollen’.
Unstable y alternates with i.
All the short diphthongs ea, eo, io, ie, and the long diphthong īē developed in OE as a result of some phonetic changes such as umlaut, fraction, palatalization.
The long diphthongs ēā and ēō correspond to Gothic diphthongs;
ēā usually corresponds to Gothic au. It is found in bēām ‘beam’, dēāƥ ‘death’ (Gothic dauƥus), and also in the past singular of class II strong verbs, as in cēās ‘chose’ (Gothic kaus), lēāc ‘locked’ (Gothic lauk);
ēō usually corresponds to Gothic iu. It is found in the infinitive of class II strong verbs: cēōsan ‘chose; (Gothic kiusan), bēōdan ‘offer’ (Gothic biudan);
īō is in most cases a variant of ēō.