
- •General remarks
- •1.2. Comparative method and “genetic” hypothesis
- •1.3. Neogrammarian movement
- •1.4. Methods of historical linguistics
- •1.5. Modern views of language evolution
- •Family Tree Theory
- •Indo-European Family of Languages
- •Indo-European Family of languages
- •Proto-Language. The Evolution of Proto-Germanic
- •Historical Sources of Germanic Tribes and Dialects
- •Geographical distribution. Dialect geography
- •Classification of Germanic languages
- •1.1. Germanic consonant system
- •1.1.1. The First Consonant Shift (Grimm’s Law)
- •1.1.2. The Second Consonant Shift
- •1.1.3. The Third Consonant Shift
- •1.1.4. Other consonant changes
- •2.1. Germanic vowel system.
- •2.1.1 Independent changes.
- •2.1.2 Assimilative changes. Vowel mutation / Umlaut
- •2.1.3 Other vowel changes.
- •1.1. The Word-Class Noun
- •1.1.1. Structure of a Noun in Germanic
- •1.1.2. Grammatical categories of a Noun in Germanic
- •1.2. The Rise of Article
- •1.3. The word-class adjective
- •1.4. The word-class verb
- •1.4.1. Morphological classification of old Germanic verbs
- •1.4.2. Evolution of grammatical categories
- •Reading material Basic
- •Additional
- •1.1. Runes and their origin
- •1.2. Wulfila’s Gothic alphabet
- •1.3 Introduction of the Latin alphabet
- •Additional
- •1. Etymological layers of Old Germanic vocabulary
- •1.1. Native words
- •1.2. Loan words
- •1.3. Ways of word-formation
- •Reading material Basic
- •Historical Background
- •Vandalic
- •[Edit] History and evidence
- •[Edit] Alphabet
- •[Edit] Sounds
- •[Edit] Vowels
- •[Edit] Consonants
- •[Edit] Stops
- •[Edit] Fricatives
- •[Edit] Nasals and approximants and other phonemes
- •[Edit] Accentuation and Intonation
- •[Edit] Morphology [edit] Nouns
- •[Edit] Pronouns
- •[Edit] Verbs
- •[Edit] Gothic compared to other Germanic languages
- •[Edit] Gothic and Old Norse
- •[Edit] Examples
- •[Edit] Notes From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- •Vandalic language From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- •Burgundian language (Germanic) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- •Goths From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- •[Edit] Etymology
- •[Edit] Proto-history [edit] Jordanes
- •[Edit] Jordanes and Orosius
- •[Edit] Pliny
- •[Edit] History
- •[Edit] Archaeology
- •[Edit] Languages
- •[Edit] Symbolic legacy
- •[Edit] See also
- •[Edit] Footnotes From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- •[Change] Other websites
- •Visigoths From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- •[Edit] Division of the Goths: Tervingi and Vesi
- •[Edit] Etymology of Tervingi and Vesi/Visigothi
- •[Edit] History
- •[Edit] War with Rome (376–382)
- •[Edit] Reign of Alaric I
- •[Edit] Visigothic kingdom
- •[Edit] Visigothic religion
- •[Edit] Visigothic culture
- •[Edit] Law
- •[Edit] Non-Balti kings
- •Ostrogoths From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- •[Edit] Divided Goths: Greuthungi and Ostrogothi
- •[Edit] Etymology of Greuthungi and Ostrogothi
- •[Edit] Prehistory
- •[Edit] History [edit] Hunnic invasions
- •[Edit] Post-Hunnic movements
- •[Edit] Kingdom in Italy
- •[Edit] War with Rome (535–554)
- •[Edit] Ostrogothic culture
- •2.: Visigoths and ostrogoths — ( p. 8 ) - Edward Gibbon, The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, vol. 2 [1776]
- •The origin of the goths; and the gothic history of jordanes — (
- •Germany
- •The story of the Goths and Romans is well known. The Visigoths ...
- •1.2 Peculiarities of the East Germanic subgroup
- •9.3 Gothic and Germanic
- •Reading material Basic
- •Additional
- •10. North Germanic Languages
- •10.1 Historical background. Division into East Scandinavian and West
- •10.2. East Scandinavian subgroup
- •10.2.1. Danish
- •10.2.2. Swedish
- •10.3. West Scandinavian Subgroup
- •10.3.1. Norwegian
- •10.3.2. Icelandic
- •10.3.3. Faroese
- •10.4 Simple sentence in Scandinavian languages
- •Additional
- •11. West germanic languages
- •11.1 Historical background
- •11.2 Peculiarities of West-Germanic subgroup
- •11.3. Frisian
- •11.4. Dutch
Additional
Быкова О.И. и др. История германских языков и письменности.- Воронеж: ВГУ, 1982.
Стеблин-Каменский М.И. История скандинавских языков. М.-Л.:АН СССР, 1953.- С.9-41.
Elliott R. Runes: An Introduction.- Manchester, 1959.
Howard M. The runes and other magical alphabets.-L.: The Aquarian Press, 1981.
Moltke E. Runes and their origin: Denmark and elsewhere.- Copenhagen, 1985.
Sources: "On the Origins of the Latin Alphabet: Modern Views, by Arthur E. Gordon. California Studies in Classical Antiquity, Vol. 2, (1969), pp. 157-170.
Components of OLD Germanic Vocabulary
and the ways of its development
1. Etymological layers of Old Germanic vocabulary
The vocabulary of Old Germanic languages consisted of two principal groups differentiated according to their origin: native words and borrowings (loan words).
1.1. Native words
Native Germanic lexicon was constituted by three etymological layers dating back to different chronological periods – Proto-Indo-European, Proto-Germanic and the epoch after splitting languages.
The first and the most ancient etymological layer of all Germanic languages is Common Indo-European. Here belong the words which were inherited and preserved from Proto-Indo-European.
Among words of Indo-European origin there are the following English ones which fall into several semantic groups:
- terms of kinship - words denoting members of the family and closest relations (father, mother, brother, son, grandfather, grandmother, daughter);
- names of parts of human body (eye, ear, foot, heart, nose; nail);
- names of plants and animals (tree, birch, beech; cat, wolf, goose);
- words denoting periods of time (night, year, day);
- word denoting basic qualities (young, cold, long, old)
- colour names (red, white, yellow, black);
- words denoting nature phenomena (sun, moon, snow, star, water, hill, stone);
- basic numerals: (one, two, three, six, ten);
- verbs denoting basic activities (do, eat, sleep, beat, sit, love)
- some pronouns (I, my, mine).
Words of Indo-European origin have cognates in other languages of Indo-European family which are the witnesses of common origin. Cognates are words related to each other by common descent and having derived from a common source. One can come across cognate words in related languages. For example, Engl. sun (OE sunne) has cognates in other Indo-European languages: OS, OHG, ON sunna; Du. zon, G. Sonne, Goth. sunnō, Homeric Gr. eélios, Attic hḗlios, L. sōl, Russ. солнце, Ukr. сонце, Avestan xueng, cf. IE *saewel- ‘to shine, sun’.
The second etymological layer in the lexicons of all Germanic languages is Common Germanic word-stock which follows Common Indo-European layer according to the chronology of its development. Its formation dates back to Proto-Germanic period which was common to Germanic-speaking community. Thus, the words of this lexical layer have cognates within Germanic group of languages, but have no parallels outside it.
Common Germanic words fall into the following semantic groups:
- names of plants and animals (fox, sheep, crow);
- words denoting periods of time (summer, winter, time, tide, month, week);
- words denoting artefacts (house, bridge, room, hat);
- words denoting nature phenomena (storm, ice, rain);
- verbs denoting basic activities (make, look, like).
All of them have cognates in other Germanic languages. As illustrations of Common Germanic cognates the following examples may serve: Engl. winter (O.E. winter) from P.Gmc. *wentruz (cf. O.Fris., Du. winter, O.S., O.H.G. wintar, Ger. Winter, Dan., Swed. vinter, Goth. wintrus, O.N. vetr).
The third etymological constituent of the native Germanic word-stock is the group of English (German, etc.) words proper. Its formation starts after the splitting of the unity of Proto-Germanic language comprising different Germanic tribal dialects that took place at the end of the Late Proto-Germanic period. The development of this lexical layer is the result of divergent change of Germanic languages after their splitting into groups of tribal dialects that served as the bases for the formation of separate Germanic languages. It is the etymological layer of words each Germanic language formed on its own.
To this part of Germanic word-stock such English words belong: bird (O.E. bridd, originally "young bird"), call (O.E. ceallian). Most of these words are the products of ancient word-forming processes. To such words belong both morphologically simple words, simplified in the course of numerous phonetic processes, e.g.: lord (cf. O.E. hlaford "master of a household, ruler, superior," earlier hlafweard, lit. "one who guards the loaves," from hlaf "bread, loaf" + weard "keeper, guardian, ward").
They have no cognates either within Germanic group of languages or outside it.