An Introduction to Old English Edinburgh University Press
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Present
Past Indicative 1 Sing. de¯me de¯mde 2 Sing. de¯mst de¯mdest 3 Sing. de¯m e de¯mde Plural de¯ma e de¯mdon Subjunctive Sing. de¯me de¯mde Plural de¯men de¯mdon VERB FORMS 43 02 pages 001-166 29/1/03 16:09 Page 43 Imperative 2nd Sing. de¯m _____ 2nd Plural de¯ma e _____ Participle de¯mende g . ede¯med Given the discussion immediately above, the first thing to note is that here there is no sign of gemination. The reason for that is that gemin- ation could only occur after a light syllable. This mention of syllable weight leads us on naturally to the next point. Forms such as de¯mst, de¯m ´ , de¯mde do not have any vowel immediately after the stem, in contrast to all the other forms we have encountered. This is the result of a process called syncope. Broadly speaking, what happens is that a fully un- stressed vowel is lost after a heavy syllable provided that it is followed by further syllabic material. Of course, this does not immediately appear to be the case in de¯mst and de¯m ´ ; compare g . ede¯med where there is no syncope. All that I can say here, rather unsatisfactorily, is that at the time when the change occurred, there was indeed a further following vowel. Despite this, the actual process of syncope is not too difficult to under- stand, especially because it can happen in later periods of English too. That explains, for example, the pronunciation of business, where there are only two syllables, compare busyness ‘the state of being busy’, where there is no syncope. There is a slight glitch in the conjugation of class 1 verbs which I have yet to mention. This occurs in conjugation of verbs with a light stem ending in -r. Since the glitch is apparent only in the present tense, we need only examine those forms. An example of such a verb is nerian ‘save’: Present Indicative Subjunctive 1 Sing. nerie 2 Sing. nerest 3 Sing. nere e Sing. nerie Plural neria e Plural nerien Imperative 2nd Sing. nere 2nd Plural neria e Participle neriende Why do these forms differ from the usual short-stemmed verbs, and how do they do so? The answer to the second of these questions helps to answer the first. For it should be clear that the distinguishing feature of these verbs is that they show medial -i- in exactly where they should 44 AN INTRODUCTION TO OLD ENGLISH 02 pages 001-166 29/1/03 16:09 Page 44 have a geminate consonant. Although there is no completely adequate explanation of why /r/ should prevent gemination, it is undoubtedly the case that it does so. There is an interesting consequence of this failure. As you can see, verbs like nerian fall halfway between class 1 and class 2 verbs, in not having gemination but rather preserving -i-; on the other hand they otherwise have the typical class 1 inflexions, e.g. nere ´ rather than those of class 2, compare lufa ´ . Old English speakers appear to have noticed that state of affairs too and consequently in later texts, such as those from the period of Ælfric, words such as nerian began to adopt the inflections of the class 2 conjugation so that we find nera ´ as well as nere ´ . This is an early sign of what was to come, when in the Middle English period simplification to one weak verb class occurred. 4.4 Unmutated verbs There was in Old English a small but important group of verbs which were in origin part of class 1 but which had already undergone drastic modification. Historical grammars always classify these verbs as belong- ing to a sub-group of class 1, but there is good reason for not doing so. I shall call these verbs ‘unmutated verbs’, an ugly terms derived from the German term Rückumlaut ‘reverse umlaut’. I shall explain more about this phenomenon, which involves the sound change called i-umlaut which I referred to when discussing nouns like fo¯t ‘foot’ in the previous chapter, in §4.5. A typical unmutated verb is sellan ‘sell’. In the present tense such a verb is exactly like any other class 1 verb, but its past tense is very different: Present Past Indicative 1 Sing. selle sealde 2 Sing. selest sealdest 3 Sing. sele e sealde Plural sella e sealdon Subjunctive Sing. selle sealde Plural sellen sealdon Imperative 2nd Sing. sele _____ 2nd Plural sella e Participle sellende g . eseald VERB FORMS 45 02 pages 001-166 29/1/03 16:09 Page 45 As you can see, the stem vowel of the past is unexpected given what we have seen so far. But it is also true that we find the same kind of alter- nation in present-day English sell ~ sold. That is why I have chosen to assign such verbs to a class of their own. Today there is only one verb which follows the same pattern, namely tell = Old English tellan, but there were others in Old English: cwellan ‘kill’, dwellan ‘dwell’, stellan ‘place’. There is, however, another group of verbs which belong to the same conjugation, such as bringan ~ bro¯hte ‘bring’. You may have noted that all the verbs in the previous paragraph have a stem which in the past Download 1.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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