Preliminary remarks. Form-Building. Parts of Speech and Grammatical Categories

OLD ENGLISH GRAMMAR

LECTURE 8

Plan

 

1. Preliminary remarks. Form-building. Parts of speech and grammatical categories.

2. The Noun:Grammatical categories. The use of cases. Morphological classification of nouns. Declensions.

3. The Pronoun:Personal pronouns. Demonstrative pronouns. Other classes of pronouns.

4. The Adjective:Grammatical categories. Weak and strong declension. Degrees of comparison.

5. The Verb:Grammatical categories of the finite verb. Grammatical categories of the verbals. Morphological classification of verbs. Strong verbs. Weak verbs. Minor groups of verbs.

6. Syntax: The phrase. Noun, adjective and verb patterns. The simple sentence. Compound and complex sentences. Connectives. Word order.

 

Literature

1. Аракин И.Д. Очерки по истории английского языка. – М, 1955.

2. Бруннер К. История английского языка. Перев. с нем. – М.: Иностранная литература, т. I, II, 1956.

3. Верба Л.Г. Історія англійської мови. Посібник для студентів та викладачів вищих навчальних закладів. – Вінниця: НОВА КНИГА, 2006. – 296 с.

4. Введение в германскую филологию. Арсеньева М.Г., Балашова С.П., Берков В.П., Соловьева Л.Н. – М., 1980.

5. Иванова И. П., Беляева Т. М. Хрестоматия по истории английского языка. – Л., 1973.

6. Иванова И.П., Чахоян Л.П. История английского языка. – М., 1976

7. Ильиш Б.А. История английского языка. – Л., 1973.

8. Расторгуева Т.А. История английского языка. – М., 2005.

9. Смирницкий А.И. История английского языка. Курс лекций. – М., 1965.

OE was a synthetic, or inflected type of language; it showed the relations between words and expressed other grammatical meanings mainly with the help of simple (synthetic) grammatical forms. In building grammatical forms OE employed grammatical endings, sound interchanges in the root, grammatical prefixes, and suppletive /sə'pli:tɪv/ formation.

Grammatical endings, or inflections, were certainly the principal form-building means used: they were found in all the parts of speech that could change their form; they were usually used alone but could also occur in combination with other means.

Sound interchanges were employed on a more limited scale and were often combined with other form-building means, especially endings. Vowel interchanges were more common than interchanges of consonants.

The use of prefixes in grammatical forms was rare and was confined to verbs. Suppletive forms were restricted to several pronouns, a few adjectives and a couple of verbs.

The parts of speech to be distinguished in OE are as follows: the noun, the adjective, the pronoun, the numeral (all referred to as nominal parts of speech or nomina), the verb, the adverb, the preposition, the conjunction, and the interjection. Inflected parts of speech pos­sessed certain grammatical categories displayed in formal and semantic correlations and oppositions of grammatical forms. Grammatical categories are usually subdivided into nominal categories, found in nominal parts of speech and verbal categories found chiefly in the finite verb.

We shall assume that there were five nominal grammatical cate­gories in OE: number, case, gender, degrees of comparison, and the category of definiteness/indefiniteness. Each part of speech had its own peculiarities in the inventory of categories and the number of members within the category (categorial forms). The noun had only two grammatical categories proper: number and case. The adjective had the maximum number of categories – five. The number of members in the same grammatical categories in different parts of speech did not necessarily coincide; thus the noun had four cases, Nominative, Genitive, Dative, and Accusative, whereas the adjective had five (the same four cases plus the Instrumen­tal case). Perhaps in the pre-written period the noun had five cases, since cases of adjectives depend on the cases of nouns; this supposition is confirmed by several instances of specific Instrumental noun-endings in the earliest texts. The personal pronouns of the 1st and 2nd p., unlike other parts of speech, distinguished three numbers – Singular, Plural and Dual.

Cf.

Verbal grammatical categories were not numerous: tense and mood – verbal categories proper – and number and person, showing agree­ment between the verb-predicate and the subject of the sentence.

The distinction of categorial forms by the noun and the verb was to a large extent determined by their division into morphological classes: declensions and conjugations.

The following survey of OE grammar deals with the main parts of speech: the noun, the adjective, the pronoun, and the verb. Many features of the OE syntactic structure will be self-evident from the study of morphology; therefore the description of syntax is confined to the main peculiarities which may help to trace the trends of develop­ment in later periods. The OE grammatical system is described synchronically as appearing in the texts of the 9th and 10th c. (mainly WS); facts of earlier, pre­written, history will sometimes be mentioned to account for the features of written OE and to explain their origin.