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Lecture 7 changes in the nominal system in middle english and new english

List of principal questions:

  1. General survey of grammar changes in Middle and New English.

  2. The noun

    1. Middle English

      1. Morphological classification

      2. Grammatical categories

    2. New English

      1. Morphological classification

      2. Origin of irregular noun forms

      3. Grammatical categories

  3. the adjective

  4. The pronoun

  5. The article

Literature

  1. R.V. Reznik, T.C. Sorokina, I.V. Reznik A History of the English language. M., 2003.

  2. T.A. Rastorguyeva History of English. M., 1983.

  3. А.И. Смирницкий Лекции по истории английского языка. М., 2000.

  4. К. Бруннер История английского языка. Т.1 М., 2001.

  5. И. Чахоян, Л. Иванова, Т. Беляева. История английского языка. СПб., 1998.

  6. А.И. Смирницкий Древнеанглийский язык. М., 1955.

1. General survey of grammar changes in Middle English and New English

The grammar system of the language in middle and new English periods underwent radical changes. As we remember, the principal means of expressing grammatical relations in Old English were the following:

  • suffixation

  • vowel interchange

  • use of suppletive forms,

all these means being synthetic.

In middle and New English many grammatical notions formerly expressed synthetically either disappeared from the grammar system of the language or came to be expressed by analytical means. There developed the use of analytical forms consisting of a form word and notional word, and also word order, special use of prepositions, etc. – analytical means.

In Middle and New English we observe the process of the gradual loss of declension by many parts of speech, formerly declined. Thus in Middle English there declinable parts of speech: the noun, the pronoun and the adjective, against five existing in Old English (the above plus the infinitive and the participle). In New English the noun and the pronoun (mainly personal) are only parts of speech that are declined.

2. The noun

2.1. Middle English

      1. Morphological classification

In Old English there were three principal types of declensions:

a-stem, n-stem and root-stem declension, and also minor declensions: i-stem, u-stem and others. These types are preserved in Middle English, but the number of nouns belonging to the same declension in Old and Middle English varies. The n-stem declension though preserved as a type has lost many of the nouns belonging to it while the original a-stem declension grows in volumes, acquiring new words from the original a-stem, root-stem declensions, and also different groups of minor declensions and also borrowed words. For example:

Old English Middle English

a-stem singular stān singular stōn

plural stānas plural stōnes

n-stem singular nama singular name

plural namen plural namen

root-stem singular bōc (book) singular book

plural bēc plural bookes

Borrowed singular corage (courage)

plural corages

      1. Grammatical categories

There are only two grammatical categories in the declension of nouns against three in Old English: number and case, the category of gender having been lost at the beginning of the Middle English period.

Number

There are two number forms in Middle English: singular and plural. For example:

Old English Middle English

Singular fisc fish

stān stōn

nama name

Plural fiscas fishes

stānas stōnes

naman names

Case

The number of cases in Middle English is reduced as compared to Old English. There are only two cases in Middle English: Common and Genitive, the Old English Nominative, Accusative and Dative case having fused into one case – the Common case at the beginning of Middle English.

For example:

Old English Middle English

Nominative stān nama

Accusative stān naman } → Common case stōn name

Dative stāne naman

Genitive stānes naman Genitive case stōnes names

Thus we see that the complicated noun paradigm that existed in Old English was greatly simplified in Middle English, which is reflected in the following:

  1. reduction of the number of declensions;

  2. reduction of the number of grammatical categories;

  3. reduction of the number of categorical forms within one of the remaining grammatical categories – the category of case.

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