- •1. The Old Germanic Ls, their classification and principal features.
- •3. The chronological division of the history of English.
- •6. Oe dialects. The role of the Wessex dialect.
- •8. Major spelling changes in me, their causes.
- •4. The Scandinavian invasion and its effect on English.
- •9,10,11. The oe vowel system (monophthongs and diphthongs). Major changes.
- •12. Consonant changes in me and ne (growth of affricates, loss of certain consonants).
- •5. The Norman Conquest and its effect on the history of English.
- •14. The oe noun system (grammatical categories, major types of declension).
- •15,The changes of the noun grammatical categories in me and their causes.
- •16. The oe personal pronouns, their grammatical categories and declension. Lexical replacement in me.
- •17. The development of the adjective in me (decay of grammatical categories and declensions).
- •18. The oe demonstrative pronouns, their grammatical categories and declension. The rise of the articles.
- •21. Oe strong verbs and their further development.
- •22. Oe preterit-present verbs and their further development.
- •24. The rise of analytical forms in verbal system in me.
- •20. Oe weak verbs and their further development.
- •19. The oe verb (grammatical categories, morphological types).
- •31. Borrowings from classical Ls in me.
- •29. Oe vocabulary, its volume and etymological structure.
- •28. Types of syntactic relations in oe.
- •26. Causes of changes in English morphology.
- •2. The common features of germanic languages
- •25 Verbals in the history of English
- •27.Oe syntax
- •30.Word Order
6. Oe dialects. The role of the Wessex dialect.
Kent (Kentish was spoken in Kent, Surrey, the Isle of Wight), from the tongues of Jutes/ Frisian; Wessex (West Saxon was spoken along the Thames and the Bristol Channel), origin from a Saxon dialect, 9th c. – Wessex was the centre of the English culture and politics. West Saxon – the bookish type of L (Alfred the Great – the patron of culture and learning); Mercia (Mercian was spoken between the Thames and the Humber), a dialect of north Angles; Northumbria (Northumbrian was spoken between the Humber and the Forth), a dialect of south Angles; 8th c. – Northumbria was the centre of the English culture.
The first historian who started to record the history of the Germanic tribes on the British Isles and is considered to be the first English historian is Bede the Venerable, an English monk, who wrote “The Ecclesiastical History of the English People”.
The most important dialect in the OE period was the West Saxon dialect.
ME dialects. The rise of the London dialect.
OE Dialect Kentish → ME Dialect Kentish Dialect;
OE Dialect West Saxon → ME Dialect South-Western Dialects (East Saxon Dialect, London Dialect, Gloucester Dialect);
OE Dialect Mercian → ME Dialect Midland Dialects (West Midland Dialect, East Midland Dialect);
OE Dialect Northumbrian → ME Dialect Northern Dialects (Yorkshire Dialect, Lancashire Dialect).
The most important dialect in the ME period was the London dialect:
In the 12th -13th c. the London Dialect became the literary L and the standard, both in written and spoken form. The reasons why this happened:
The capital of the country was transferred from Winchester, Wessex, to London a few years before the Norman Conquests.
The East Saxon Dialect, that was the basis of the London Dialect got, became the most prominent in the ME period.
Most writers and authors of the ME period used the London Dialect in their works.
Features of the London Dialect:
The basis of the London Dialect was the East Saxon Dialect
The East Saxon Dialect mixed with the East Midland Dialect and formed the London Dialect.
Thus the London Dialect became more Anglican than Saxon in character The London Dialect is an Anglican dialect.
8. Major spelling changes in me, their causes.
In the course of ME many new devices were introduces into the system of spelling; some of them reflected the sound changes which had been completed or were still in progress in ME; others were graphic replacements of OE letters by new letters and digraphs.
In ME the runic letters passed out of use. Thorn – þ – and the crossed d – đ, ð – were replaced by digraph th, “wyne” > double u – w -, shwa fell into disuse;
French influence: ou, ie, ch;
Wider use of digraphs: sch/ssh, dg, wh, oo, ee, gh;
When u stood close to n, m, v it was replaced by o to indicate short u (lufu - love);
y was used as equivalent of i;
ou and ow were interchangeable.
The letters th and s indicated voiced sounds between vowels, and voiceless sounds – initially, finally and next to other voiceless consonant.
Long sounds in ME texts are often shown by double letters or digraphs. The length of the vowel can be inferred from the nature of the syllable.