1. The first Germanic consonant shift. Grimm's Law. Verner's Law. The shift of stress


The noun in OE, its grammatical categories. Consonantal stems


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4.The noun in OE, its grammatical categories. Consonantal stems.

Nouns in Old English had the categories of number, gender and case. Gender is actually not a grammatical category in a strict sense of the word, for every noun with all its forms belongs to only one gender (the other nominal parts of speech have gender forms); but case and number had a set of endings.

Nouns used to denote males are normally masculine - mann, feder, brodor, (man, father, brother). Naturally, those denoting females should be all feminine, - modor, sweostor (mother, sister). Yet there are curious exceptions, such words as wif (wife) is neuter (compare in Ukrainian хлоп’я, дівча). And wifman (woman) is masculine, because the second element of the compound is masculine. The gender of the other nouns is unmotivated, the same as in Ukrainian.

Still in Ukrainian nouns have endings that can indicate the gender of the noun — cmen (чол.), вікно (cep.) вода (жін.). In Old English there no such endings, and words very similar in form may be of different genders. The same form may have two different meanings distinguished by gender,

for example leod masc. "man", but leod (fem.), "people”.

There are two numbers - singular and plural, and four cases-nominative, genitive, dative and accusative. Comparing with what we have now we can see that number proved to be a stable category, relevant for rendering the meanings and expressing the true state of things in reality.

All the nouns can be classified according to the different principles. The nouns are divided into classes according to the former stem-forming suffixes, which were hardly visible even in Gothic, the language separated in time from the Old English by centuries. These stem-forming ullixes determined what inflections were taken by the nouns. Though lost in Old English they still worked in the way the case and number forms were made (we may compare it with some Russian nouns - without knowing the history of declensions, for instance, it is difficult to explain why in Russian the plural of cmoл cmольі, but that of cmyл is not cmyльі but cmyлья, very similar nouns noчь and дочь are not so similar in the plural: ночи but дочери not дочи. In Ukrainian the nouns ім’я and хлопя look alike but the plural of the first is імена and of the second not xnonena but xлоon'яma.

Without knowing the original structure of the nouns in the language we can hardly explain the exceptions in the formations of plural of the present-day English nouns too. Why foot-feet but boot-boots?

The Strong Declension includes nouns that had had a vocalic stem-forming suffix. Former suffixes (a.o.i.u) are no longei found in Old English, moreover, even the very paradigms of these groups of nouns were already splitting (we can see considerable difference in declension of nouns of different genders within the class of nouns originally having the same stem-forming suffix.) Yet the traditional classification will look like this.


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