1. Previous lesson review - 1. Previous lesson review
- 2. What is morphology?
- 3. Morphology of Old English
- geographically—as a language spoken by the Germanic settlers in the British Isles;
- historically—as a language spoken from the time of the Germanic settlement in the 5th century until the Norman Conquest in 1066
- genetically—as a Lowlands branch of the West Germanic group of languages (in other words, it is a branch of the Germanic languages that emerged from languages spoken in what are now Holland, northern Germany, and Denmark);
- typologically—as a language with a particular sound system (phonology), grammatical endings (morphology), word order patterns (syntax), and vocabulary (lexis).
morphology - What is morphology, really?
- morphology
- is the study of words
- Independently
much closer in nature to Proto-Germanic than modern English is - much closer in nature to Proto-Germanic than modern English is
- First, it means that Old English had retained five grammatical cases:
- Nominative (noun as subject)
- Accusative (noun as direct object)
- Genitive (noun with preposition –of or –’s)
- Dative (She gave the postman a letter)
- Old English Noun. Categories of of Noun
- categories of number, gender and case
- Three grammatical genders in nouns: Masculine, Feminine, Neuter
- two grammatical numbers: Singular, Plural
- se cyning ‘the king’ in the nominative form
- þæs cyninges ‘the king’s’ in the genitive
- þǣm cyninge in the dative ‘for/to the king’.
- Doesn’t exist in modern English
- Old English had grammatical gender like German articles die, der, das
Singular - Singular
- Plural- s
- man, men; goose, geese; foot, feet.
Strong verbs formed the past tense by changing a vowel – like in sing, sang, sung, while weak verbs formed it by adding an ending – like walk – walked. - Strong verbs formed the past tense by changing a vowel – like in sing, sang, sung, while weak verbs formed it by adding an ending – like walk – walked.
- the strong verbs were divided into seven (!) different classes, each depending on how the verb’s stem changed to show past tense.
- the grammatical forms were built by means of: sound interchanges, inflections and suppletion.
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