An Introduction to Old English Edinburgh University Press
participle. The former is either
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participle. The former is either wesende or be¯onde, whilst the latter is g . ebe¯on. I shall explain the prefix g . e- in the next chapter. There are also two special forms for the imperative singular and plural: wes ~ be¯o and wesa ´ ~ beo ´ . Exercise Although it would be possible to present phrases which would test your ability to reproduce some of the material above, I don’t believe that that approach works as well as giving you some real Old English to analyse. The exercise below follows the same pattern as that in Chapter 2, and again I have excerpted a passage from Ælfric, this time from the Life of St. Mary of Egypt: And t æ¯r g . e-æt healfne dæ¯l t æs hla¯fes there; ate; half; part and t æs wæteres ondranc and me t æ¯r on niht g . e-reste drank up; stayed and on ærne morg . en ofer t a¯ e¯a fo¯r early morning; river went T a¯ onga¯n ic . eft biddan mine lættewestran Sancta Maria began; again; pray; guide t æt he¯o me g . e-rihte t yder hire willa wæ¯re direct; whither; willa E us ic . beco¯m on t is we¯sten arrived; wilderness and t anone o e e isne andweardan dæg . since; until; present ic . feorrode symle fle¯onde minne God kept apart always; fleeing ; anbı¯dig . ende and g . e-hihtende awaiting; rejoicing The last line means: ‘I have always been fleeing far away, awaiting my God and rejoicing in him’. What I should like you to do is not merely to translate the passage into present-day English, preferably without using the glossary at the end of MORE NOUNS AND ADJECTIVES 37 02 pages 001-166 29/1/03 16:09 Page 37 the book but merely using the glosses given above. I would also suggest that you should attempt to analyse the morphological structure of as many of the nouns and adjectives as you can. To do this you will have to seek the help of the glossary at the end, so try the translation first. 38 AN INTRODUCTION TO OLD ENGLISH 02 pages 001-166 29/1/03 16:09 Page 38 4 Verb forms 4.1 Verb types In Old English, not wholly unlike present-day English, we can divide verbs up into three main groups, together with a handful of irregular verbs. The main groups are: (1) weak verbs; (2) strong verbs; (3) modals. But there are significant general differences which should be pointed out at once. Firstly, you may have noticed that I have not suggested a group of auxiliary verbs parallel to be, have and do. For the last of these there is no problem, since do could only function as a full verb in Old English. It is arguable, however, that the first two could function rather like an Download 1.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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