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Lecture Morphology of Roman-German languages-fayllar.org
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- Doesn’t exist in modern English
Lecture Morphology of Roman-German languages Lecture 3. The morphology of Roman-German languages 1. Previous lesson reviewPlan 1. Previous lesson review 2. What is morphology? 3. Morphology of Old English geographically—as a language spoken by the Germanic settlers in the British Isles;What is Old English? geographically—as a language spoken by the Germanic settlers in the British Isles; historically—as a language spoken from the time of the Germanic settlement in the 5th century until the Norman Conquest in 1066 genetically—as a Lowlands branch of the West Germanic group of languages (in other words, it is a branch of the Germanic languages that emerged from languages spoken in what are now Holland, northern Germany, and Denmark); typologically—as a language with a particular sound system (phonology), grammatical endings (morphology), word order patterns (syntax), and vocabulary (lexis). morphologyWhat is morphology, really? morphology is the study of words Independently much closer in nature to Proto-Germanic than modern English isOld English morphology much closer in nature to Proto-Germanic than modern English is First, it means that Old English had retained five grammatical cases: Nominative (noun as subject) Accusative (noun as direct object) Genitive (noun with preposition –of or –’s) Dative (She gave the postman a letter) categories of number, gender and caseOld English Noun. Categories of of Noun categories of number, gender and case Three grammatical genders in nouns: Masculine, Feminine, Neuter two grammatical numbers: Singular, Plural se cyning ‘the king’ in the nominative formCases se cyning ‘the king’ in the nominative form þæs cyninges ‘the king’s’ in the genitive þǣm cyninge in the dative ‘for/to the king’. Doesn’t exist in modern EnglishGrammatical gender Doesn’t exist in modern English Old English had grammatical gender like German articles die, der, das SingularNumber Singular Plural- s man, men; goose, geese; foot, feet. Strong verbs formed the past tense by changing a vowel – like in sing, sang, sung, while weak verbs formed it by adding an ending – like walk – walked.Strong and weak verbs Strong verbs formed the past tense by changing a vowel – like in sing, sang, sung, while weak verbs formed it by adding an ending – like walk – walked. the strong verbs were divided into seven (!) different classes, each depending on how the verb’s stem changed to show past tense. the grammatical forms were built by means of: sound interchanges, inflections and suppletion. http://fayllar.org Download 3.78 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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