An Introduction to Old English Edinburgh University Press
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ip, we also find nouns such as word ‘word’ and ba¯n ‘bone’. For the most part they decline in the same way as sc . ip, except that they have a different nominative- accusative plural. In these cases such nouns have shapes identical to the corresponding singulars, that is to say, the nominative-accusative singular of word is word and so too is the nominative-accusative plural; exactly the same parallel holds in the case of ba¯n. Of the two points that arise in this context, let me deal with the trickier one first. How can this type be held to be members of the general neuters? The answer to this is that it is possible to work out that these nouns must have at one time had a final -u just like sc . ip but that there was MORE NOUNS AND ADJECTIVES 27 02 pages 001-166 29/1/03 16:09 Page 27 an historical change by which final -u was dropped after a heavy syllable, that is to say, after either a long vowel and a consonant or a short vowel and two consonants. So at an early stage in the history this must have been no more than a normal sound change; but later, certainly before the time of Ælfric, the sound change had become an inflectional property, i.e. a morphological feature. We can tell that this is the case because final -u was retained in the verbal paradigm even although it was lost every- where else, both in nouns and adjectives. There are two other important points to be made here. Firstly, what you will have noticed is that the result of the change, as I have said, is to make the nominative-accusative singular and the nominative-accusative of these neuters identical. Now given that the distinction between singu- lar and plural is one of the very few persisting and vital distinctions in English noun morphology, you would expect – indeed you know – that such neuter nouns would switch to having to the clearer ending -as. This, of course, is how they end up: present-day bones, words. But it should be noted that this development only takes place after the Old English period, for until then the grammatical gender system is strong enough to withstand an otherwise tempting change. The second point refers back to the morphological status of this vowel loss, for it is not only neuters that are affected by the loss. Recall the feminine noun talu, which we used in Chapter 2 for the paradigm of general feminines. As you can see, this noun has a final -u in the nomi- native singular and its stem syllable is short. Therefore we should expect that there would be corresponding heavy-stemmed nouns without -u. That is indeed what happens, so that we find nouns such as glo¯f ‘glove’ and ec . g . ‘edge’. There are quite a number of other departures from the declensions given in Chapter 2. For the most part we don’t have to worry ourselves with these at this stage, but I shall mention two of them which are quite common and therefore worth knowing immediately. The first of these concerns masculine and neuter nouns with the stem vowel æ, as in dæg . ‘day’ and fæt ‘vessel, vat’. In the plural of these nouns we find, instead of æ, the vowel a, thus dagas ‘days’, fatu ‘vessels’. There is therefore a consistent contrast between the singular and plural forms which goes right through the paradigm. The second case is a matter of inflection in the general feminine declension, for there, and particularly with short- stemmed nouns, the genitive plural is often -ena rather than -a, e.g. talena rather than tala. I mention this simply because it can be confusing, since it can lead to the belief that the noun belongs not to the general feminines but to the N declension. 28 AN INTRODUCTION TO OLD ENGLISH 02 pages 001-166 29/1/03 16:09 Page 28 3.2 Minor declensions I made a distinction earlier on between irregular declensions and minor declensions. Essentially that difference is between, on the one hand, unexpected variations within one of the standard paradigms, and, on the other hand, paradigms which, although they are internally regular and self-contained are nevertheless not productive in the Old English period. In order to better understand what characterises a minor declension, I want to start this part of the discussion by looking at a minor declen- sion which is not only important in Old English, but actually remains in present-day English. The most frequent example today is man, but of course we can add to that foot, goose, louse, mouse, tooth and woman. The distinguishing feature of them all is that they show a different vowel in the plural from that in the singular. In fact this doesn’t quite fit as an expression of the alternation in woman ~ women, but here the spelling might help you to see that originally this word was a compound of the two Old English words wı¯f ‘woman’ and man ‘person’ (there was once also another, corresponding, compound carl ‘man’ plus man). In Old English equally, all the above nouns belonged to this same declension, but there a few further members, most notably a¯c (fem.) ‘oak’, bo¯c (fem.) ‘book’, burg (fem.) ‘castle’, cu¯ (fem.) ‘cow’, fe¯ond (masc.) ‘foe’, fre¯ond (masc.) ‘friend’ and hnutu (fem.) ‘nut’. Of the nouns which survive today, fo¯t, man, to¯ ´ and wı¯fman were masculine in Old English, go¯s, lu¯s and mu¯s feminine. There were never any neuter nouns in this declension. There are some minor variations between the masculine and feminine paradigms, but we need only present a single paradigm with the alternative feminine form in the genitive singular noted in brackets: Singular Plural Nom. fo¯t fe¯t Acc. fo¯t fe¯t Gen. fo¯tes (bo¯c . e) fo¯ta Dat. fe¯t fo¯tum The most obvious and the most important point to note is that the variation in stem vowel does not, as in present-day English, correlate directly with singular vs. plural. Instead, the vowel variation occurs in the dative singular and the nominative-accusative plural. Sometimes it is also found in genitive singular of feminines, so that we can find be¯c . along- side bo¯c . e. This variation was due to an earlier sound change which caused a vowel to be fronted when there was an i in the next syllable. Sub- sequently that i was lost, which makes the process, normally known as MORE NOUNS AND ADJECTIVES 29 02 pages 001-166 29/1/03 16:09 Page 29 |
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