
- •Outline
- •Grammatical categories of the finite verb
- •Conjugation of verbs in Old English
- •Morphological classification of verbs
- •Morphological classification of Old English verbs
- •Strong verbs
- •Strong verbs in Old English
- •Weak verbs
- •Minor groups of verbs
- •Preterite-Presents in Old English
- •Conjugation of preterite-presents in Old English
- •Conjugation of beon/wesan and an/eode
- •3. The verbals
- •Participles in Old English
- •4. Conclusions
Conjugation of preterite-presents in Old English
Infinitive
|
cunnan ‘can’
|
sculan ‘shall, should’
|
Present tense
|
|
|
Indicative Singular 1st 2nd
|
cann canst
|
sceal(l) scealt
|
3rd
|
cann
|
sceal(l)
|
Plural
|
cunnon
|
sculon
|
Subjunctive Singular Plural
|
cunne cunnen
|
scule, scyle sculen, scylen
|
|
—
|
|
Past tense
|
|
|
Indicative
|
|
|
Singular 1st
|
cūðe
|
sceolde
|
2nd
|
cūðest
|
sceoldest
|
3rd
|
cūðe
|
sceolde
|
Plural
|
cūðon
|
sceoldon
|
Subjunctive
|
|
|
Singular
|
cūðe
|
sceolde
|
Plural
|
cūðen
|
sceolden
|
Participle II
|
cunnen, cūð
|
—
|
Among the verbs of the minor groups there were several anomalous verbs with irregular forms.
OE willan was an irregular verb with the meaning of volition and desire; it resembled the preterite-presents in meaning and function, as it indicated an attitude to an action and was often followed by an infinitive. Cf.: 'þā ðe willað mīnes forsīðes fænian 'those who wish to rejoice in my death'.
Willan had a past tense form wolde, built like sceolde, the past tense of the preterite-present sculan, sceal. Eventually willan became a modal verb, like the surviving preterite-presents, and, together with sculan developed into an auxiliary (Mod E shall, will, should, would).
Some verbs combined the features of weak and strong verbs. OE dōn formed a weak Past tense with a vowel interchange and a Participle in -n: dōn – dyde – e-dōn ‘do’. OE būan 'live' had a weak past būde and participle II, ending in -n, e-būn like a strong verb.
Two OE verbs were suppletive: OE ān, whose past tense was built from a different root: ān – eōde – e-ān ‘go’, and bēon ‘be’.
Bēon is an ancient (IE) suppletive verb. In many languages – Germanic and non-Germanic – its paradigm is made up of several roots. (Recall Ukr бути, R быть, есть, Fr être, suis, fut). In OE the present tense forms were different modifications of the roots *wes- and *bhū, 1st p. sg – eom, bēo, 2nd p. eart, bist, etc. The past tense was built from the root *wes- on the pattern of strong verbs of Class 5. Though the infinitive and participle II do not occur in the texts, the set of forms can be reconstructed as: *wesan – wæs – wǽron – weren.
Table 4.6