An Introduction to Old English Edinburgh University Press
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Participle ____ g . edo¯n g . ega¯n All the other forms can be simply deduced. In the past tense you should take a verb form such as de¯mde as the base. Of the above forms, the past tense form of ga¯n, namely e¯ode, is probably VERB FORMS 49 02 pages 001-166 29/1/03 16:09 Page 49 the one that stands out as being odd, as quite unrelated to present-day English and at the same time unlike any of the other Old English forms. This is the result of suppletion. In suppletion what happens is that some forms in the paradigm are taken from one lexical word (in this case ga¯n) and other forms are taken from an entirely different lexical word (here e¯ode). Interestingly for the history of English, the past tense suppletive forms were replaced in Middle English by an alternative suppletion, based on the past tense of wend, so that went took over from e¯ode. That in turn caused wend to form a new past tense of its own, the regular form wended. 4.8 More on i-mutation and suppletion and adjectives Now that we have spent a little time on the topics of i-mutation and suppletion, the opportunity has arrived to bring these two topics together by looking once more at adjectives. When we discussed adjec- tives in Chapter 3, the one major issue I completely ignored was the method used in Old English to produce comparative and superlative forms. For the most part there are no serious difficulties here when the forms are compared with those in present-day English. Note, especially, that comparison by the use of more, most with the positive adjective is virtually non-existent in Old English, and all forms are derived by inflection. Note also that all comparatives are declined only according to the definite declension; this is because comparative forms are inherently definite. Superlatives have some indefinite inflections but not through- out the paradigm. For the majority of adjectives, therefore, the process of comparison is achieved by the addition of standard comparative and superlative suffixes. The comparative suffix is -ra, the superlative suffix is -ost. Thus the compared forms of the definite adjective blinda ‘blind’ are blindra, blindost. The most common variation here occurs with a small group of adjectives which have a final -u in the positive, for example calu ‘bald’, g . earu ‘ready’, mearu ‘tender’, nearu ‘narrow’, which have forms of the type nearora, nearwost, which reflects the fact that historically they originate from an otherwise lost declension. But there are some important adjectives which do not follow the above patterns. There can be two quite separate reasons for this. The first, and larger, group consists of adjectives which had compared forms deriving from a different form of the two inflections, namely a shape in which the inflections originally started with an i. This i appears as an e in the superlative but disappears altogether from the comparative. But, more 50 AN INTRODUCTION TO OLD ENGLISH 02 pages 001-166 29/1/03 16:09 Page 50 importantly, before it disappears it causes i-mutation in the compared forms of the relevant adjective. A typical example of this is eald ‘old’ with compared forms yldra, yldest. Other similar adjectives are: feorr ‘far’, gre¯at ‘great’, and sc Download 1.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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