- •1. Grimm’s and Verner’s laws.
- •1. The old Germanic languages, their classification and principal features.
- •2/3. The chronological division of the history of English. General characteristics of each period.
- •4. Oe dialects. The role of the Wessex dialect.
- •5. The Scandinavian invasion and its effect on English.
- •6. The Norman Conquest and its effect on English.
- •38. 39. The non-finite fofms of the verb in oe and their futher development.
- •8. The formation of the national e language. The London dialect.
- •9. The Germanic languages in the modern world, their classification. Their common ancestor.
- •42. Major changes in the word formation in the me.
- •12. Historical foundations of Modern English spelling.
- •10. The old alphabets. Major written records.
- •11. Major spelling changes in me.
- •7.Me dialects. Major written records. Chaucer and his Canterbury tales.
- •46. Negation in the history of English.
- •13. The oe vowel system. Major changes during the oe period.
- •40. The oe numeral and its futher development.
- •41. The oe adverb and its further development.
- •47. Word order in the history of English.
- •43. Types of syntactical relations between words in the history of English.
- •44. The distinctive features of the oe syntax.
- •45. Meaning&use of cases in oe.
- •51. French loans in English.
- •48. Oe vocabulary and its etymological characteristics.
- •35. The rise of analytical forms in the verbal system in me.
- •49. 50. Major types of word formation in oe.
- •56.Italian loans in English.
- •54.Celtic loans in English.
- •58.Main peculiarities of oe poetry.Beowulf.
- •57.,55.Borrowing in ne
- •55.Latin loans in English.
- •52.Scandinavian loans in English.
- •32. The anomalous verbs in oe and their further development.
- •31.Preterite-present verbs in oe&their further development.
- •34.Changes in the verb conjucation in me&ne.
- •30.Weak verbs in oe&their further development.
- •19. The oe consonant system. Major consonant changes in the history of English.
- •14. Major vowel changes in me, monophthongs.
- •26. The oe personal pronouns and its futher development in me and ne.
- •28. The oe verb, its gram. Categories and morphological types.
- •16. Major vowel changes in ne.
- •29. Strong verbs in oe and their development.
- •24. The sources of ne plural forms of the noun.
- •27. The oe demonstrative pronouns. The rise of the articles in English.
- •21. 22. The oe noun system.
- •23. Changes in the noun system in me and ne.
- •35.Root- stem declension
- •36.The rise of –do- forms.
- •37. The rise of the future forms
29. Strong verbs in oe and their development.
The OE verb had numerous persons and number cases, but fewer gram. categ. than NE verb had.
Str. verbs form their Past tense by changing their root vowel, had 4 principle forms:
Infinitive – wrētan;
Past sg – wrāt;
Past pl – writan;
Participle II – writēn.
They can be found in Rus → IE origin. Eg: беру – брал, несу – нес.
Often denoted the most important actions and states. In NE they are mainly irregular verbs.
Had 7 classes:
1-6 classes use vowel gradation;
7 class include reduplication verbs, build their Past tense repeating the root vowel.
The principle forms have the same endings:
Inf. - -an;
Past sg - ---;
Past pl - -on;
Part. II - -en.
some verbs with the root ending in –s; -p; -f employed an interchange of consonants [s → z → r], [θ → ð → d], [f → v];
The classes differed in the number of verbs and in their role and weight in the language.
Classes 4 and 5 deffered in the stems of Part. II. Classes 2, 3 and 4 – had identical vowels in the stems of Part. II.;
Classes 1 and 2 - contained in the root [I, u]. Classes 3, 4 and 5 – contained the gradation.
In ME many str. verbs changed into weak – they began to use dental suffix instead of the root verb change.
The root vowel in the Past sg and pl fell together. In the 15th cent – one stem is used. In NE – 3 forms of str verbs are used. Eg: writ – wrote – written.
The OE endings –an
-en →-en (NE)
-en
24. The sources of ne plural forms of the noun.
OE singular and plural.
They were well distinguished formally in all the declensions, very few homonymous forms.
The pers. pronoun of the 1st and 2nd pers – 3 numbers: sg, pl and dual. Eg: ic (sg) – wit (dual) – wē (pl).
ME the noun preserved the formal distinctions of 2 numbers. Late ME –es.
The –es under went several phonetic changes:
the voicing of fricatives;
the loss of unstressed vowels in final syllables.
Eg:
after a voiced consonant/vowel: stones OE > stoυəz > stæυnz
after a voiceless cons.: bookes [bo:kəs] > bu:ks > bυks.
after affricative [s, z, ∫], [t∫], [dg]: di∫əs > di∫iz;
The ME –en- last its productivity in NE: oxen, brethren, children.
Some nouns with homonymous form of number: sheep, deer, swine.
The gram. of former root –st has survived only as exceptions: man – men, tooth – teeth.
Forms like “data”, “antennae” have come from other languages.
27. The oe demonstrative pronouns. The rise of the articles in English.
Demonstrative pronouns:
2 of them:
prototype of “that” (sē (m), þæt (n), sēo(f));
prototype of “this” (þes(m), þēos(n), þis(f));
sē simple, sg, m, Nom;
þis – emphatic, sg, m, Nom (именно этот)ж
were used as noun determiners and through agreement with the noun, indicated its number, case and gender. They can help to distinguish between gender: Eg: þæm lande – n; þæ‾re heorde –f.
Dem. pron. became unchangeable. In OE there were 5 cases: Nom, Dat, Gen, Acc, Instr.
Its declension disappeared in ME. Traces of its Instr. case are found: Eg: the more the better followed by the comparative degree.
The ind. article developed from numeral ‘ān’ and often preserves traces of its meaning: Eg: a steaching time saves night.
In ME the OE demonst. pron. lost most of their inflected forms. Dem pron sē, sēo, þæt led to the formation of the def article.
In OE texts these pron were used as noun determiners with a weakened meaning (as Mod def art).
17. I-mutation and its traces in Modern English.
I-mutation influenced short and lond vowels. It took place in all Germanic languages except Gothic. It’s a case of regressive assimilation with the vowel ‘I’ or semivowel ‘y’. It took place in the 6th cent.
Condition of i-mutation – presence of y [й]:
Eg: ky‾ning → OE cyning
fy‾llian → OE fy‾llan
fōti → foēt (foot – feet)
Traces in Mod words:
mouse – mice; goose - geese
foot – feet; blood - bleed
tooth – teeth;
I-mutation – both syntactic and paradigmatic change (structure of the word changes, produces a new phoneme).
Before Mutated
æ
α -→ e sala – sellan → sale
α:
α: → æ lar - læ‾ran → teaching
o → e dohtor – dehter → daughter
o: → e: bōc → bēc
u → y full – fyllan
u: → y: mūs → my‾s
ea, eo→ ie eald – ieldra → old – ilder
ea:, eo: → ie: gelēafa – gelīefan – believe.
