An Introduction to Old English Edinburgh University Press
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talu (see Chapter 2), has a final -u in the nominative because it is short-
stemmed, so too should a short-stemmed adjective have final -u. And that is what we find. Thus trum ‘firm’ has nominative singular trumu. And simi- larly, of course, in the nominative-accusative plural of the neuter, we also find trumu. There are other issues too, for example the variation I mentioned 34 AN INTRODUCTION TO OLD ENGLISH 02 pages 001-166 29/1/03 16:09 Page 34 where words with the stem vowel æ, as in dæg . and fæt equally affect adjec- tives such as glæd ‘happy’, although sometimes in marginally different ways. However, the material above is more than enough to allow you to understand the basic paradigms and, particularly, the contrast between the definite and indefinite declensions. 3.4 The verb ‘to be’ So far I have simply ignored verb forms. I shall more fully repair this omission in the next two chapters, but by way of introduction I want here to look at parts of the paradigm of the verb ‘to be’. There is a particular problem with this verb, of course, as there is in present-day English, which is that it is highly irregular. Compare with be a verb such as love with its past tense loved. However, the verb’s irregularity is connected to another feature, namely its frequency. If you know any other languages than English, then it is almost certain that the same situation arises there too. I have already discussed the general issue of frequency earlier in this chapter, and therefore you should not be surprised or dismayed by the fact that the verb ‘to be’ is equally irregular in Old English. It is, if you like, a sign of the ‘normality’ of Old English. The infinitive form of ‘to be’ in Old English is be¯on, or (see further below) wesan, and the present tense indicative forms are as below. Note, however, that there are two parallel indicative paradigms. I shall explain these below: Present 1 Sing. eom be¯o 2 Sing. eart bist 3 Sing. is bi e Pl. sindon be¯o e Let me deal firstly with the ‘double’ paradigm. The first point to make is that both paradigms remained in existence until at least towards the end of the twentieth century, and indeed may still appear alongside each other. Many of you will have heard the usually fake ‘Zummerzet’ speech of south-west England, with forms such as I be, he be etc. These are relics of the second paradigm above. But everywhere else the first paradigm ousted the second, except, of course, in the infinitive, where be¯on is today the only infinitive form. I shall explain the latter below. The obvious question to ask about the above double paradigm is whether they represented, somehow, different meanings. The answer to that is in the affirmative, although the shades of meaning can merge together so that it is not always rigidly maintained. But we can say that MORE NOUNS AND ADJECTIVES 35 02 pages 001-166 29/1/03 16:09 Page 35 the usual sense of the eom paradigm is to express a present state; be¯o, on the other hand, is mostly used to express futurity or a timeless (generic) state. In other respects the above paradigms are probably reasonably access- ible. This is certainly true of the singular of the eom paradigm. There are, however, problems in the plural, where sindon is likely to be quite unfamiliar. It is, in fact, similar to forms in closely related languages such as Dutch zijn and German sind. The odd one out, as it were, is in fact present-day English are. There are, it has to be admitted, examples in Old English of aron ‘they are’ in northern and north-Midlands texts, but the interesting feature of these is that the form is not a native English one, but rather is due to Scandinavian influence. This is indeed remarkable. When a language takes forms from another language, it is almost always the case that the borrowed or loan words are nouns, adjectives or verbs with full semantic meaning. This group of words is called content words, because of their semantic content. Opposed to these are function words, which have grammatical meaning rather than semantic or lexical meaning. Such words are rarely bor- rowed. I shall return to such questions of vocabulary in Chapter 8, but it does need to be noted that aron is an example of a function loan word. The usual word sindon has other points which have to be addressed. Note especially that it is subject to considerable variation. Thus along- side sindon we find a short (and more original) form sind. Furthermore, as we have seen elsewhere, alternates with also true in is, where ys is common. The paradigm of be¯o is more straightforward, although, of course, bist will alternate with byst, although the latter is not so common. Otherwise it turns out that be¯o is much more like ‘normal’ Old English verbs in its inflection, and therefore I shall postpone that discussion until Chapter 4. The past indicative forms of ‘to be’ are very similar to the possibilities in present-day English, and it takes its forms from the alternative infini- tive wesan: Past 1 Sing. wæs 2 Sing. wæ¯re 3 Sing. wæs Pl. wæ¯ron The past tense is often described as the preterite in grammar books, but here I shall stick with the more common usage in present-day English, namely ‘past’. Sometimes we find was rather than wæs but otherwise there is nothing of importance to note there. 36 AN INTRODUCTION TO OLD ENGLISH 02 pages 001-166 29/1/03 16:09 Page 36 One feature which is much more common in Old English than in present-day English is the use of special subjunctive forms. I shall attempt to explain the usage of the subjunctive in later chapters, but since it is so common, it is worth seeing the forms now: Subjunctive Present Past Sing. sy¯ be¯o wæ¯re Pl. sy¯n be¯on wæ¯ren As can be seen, there is no distinction between the 1st, 2nd and 3rd persons, even in the singular. These special subjunctive forms are perhaps not quite as unusual as they might first appear to be, since you should already be familiar with present-day English phrases such as If I were you… Finally, there are some further inflectional forms which correspond to forms also found today. There is both a present participle and a past Download 1.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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