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Vowel Stems

Strong Declensions

a-stems

ō-stems

i-stems

u-stems

masculine, neuter

feminine

all genders

masculine, feminine

Consonant Stems

Weak declension

Minor declensions

n-stems

root-stems

r-stems

es-stems

all genders

masculine, feminine

masculine, feminine

neuter

2.6.2. Vowel Stems Strong Declension

2.6.2.1. a-stems

A-stems were either masculine or neuter. The two genders differed only in the nominative and accusative plural: masculine nouns had the ending –as; in the neuter nouns the ending depended on the number of syllables and on the shortness or length of the root syllable: monosyllabic nouns with a short root syllable had the ending-u, with a long root syllable they had no ending at all. Dissyllabic nouns with a short root syllable had no ending, with a long root syllable they had the ending –u.

stān (stone), scip (ship), land (land)

Masculine gender

Neuter gender

Case

Sg number

Pl number

Sg number

Pl number

Sg number

Pl number

Nom.

stān

stānas

scip

scipu

land

land

Gen.

stānes

stāna

scipes

scipa

landes

landa

Dat.

stāne

stānum

scipe

scipum

lande

landum

Acc.

stān

stānas

scip

scipu

land

land

Cf. OE Dat.sg lande, OE Dat.pl landum – ModR Dat.sg земле, Dat.pl землям

The a-stem declension played a very important role in the history of English noun inflections. The ending –es of the genitive singular has eventually developed into ModE ’s of the possessive case and the ending –as of the nominative and accusative plural developed into the plural ending -(e)s of ModE. Thus, the two productive endings of modern English nouns go down to the paradigm of the OE a-stems.

Since the ending –u of the neuter nominative and accusative plural regularly disappeared after long syllables the form of the plural became identical with that of the singular.

Sg. Nom. Acc. word wīf (wife) scēap (sheep) dēor (deer)

Pl. Nom. Acc. word wīf scēap dēor

Eventually nouns of the type «word», «wife» have acquired the regular plural ending –s, while sheep, deer, swine have retained their uninflected plurals.

a-stems were usually subdivided into pure a-stems, ja-stems and wa-stems. Some peculiarities of their paradigm are connected with the semivowels [j] and [w] of the stem-building suffix. The a-stem declension corresponds to the second declension of Russian and Latin

2.6.2.2. ō-stems

ō-stems are all feminine. In the nominative singular monosyllabic nouns with a short root syllable had the ending –u, with a long root syllable and disyllabic nouns had no ending at all.

caru (care), lār (folk-lore), feðer (feather)

Feminine gender

Case

Sg number

Pl number

Sg number

Pl number

Sg number

Pl number

Nom.

caru

cara

lār

lāra

feðer

feðera

Gen.

care

cara

lāre

lāra

feðere

feðera

Dat.

care

carum

lāre

lārum

feðere

feðerum

Acc.

care

cara

lāre

lāra

feðere

feðera

The ō-declension corresponded to the first or ā-declension of Russian or Latin. Cf.

R рука, нога, L silva (wood). The declension has left no traces in ModE.

ō-stems are usually subdivided into pure ō-stems, jō-stems and wō-stems.

2.6.2.3. i-stems

i-stems comprised nouns of all three genders. The masculine and neuter i-stems did not differ much in their declensions from the a-stems. The declension of feminine stems differs slightly from the declension of the ō-stems: in the nominative and accusative cases singular they have no endings, like ō-stems, in the plural they may have the ending –a. The root vowel has undergone mutation.

hyll (hill), flǣsc (flesh), cwēne (woman)

Masculine gender

Neuter gender

Feminine gender

Case

Sg number

Pl number

Sg number

Pl number

Sg number

Pl number

Nom.

hyll

hyllas

flǣsc

flǣsc

cwēn

cwēne, -a

Gen.

hylles

hylla

flǣsces

flǣsca

cwēne

cwēna

Dat.

hylle

hyllum

flǣsce

flǣscum

cwēne

cwēnum

Acc.

hyll

hyllas

flǣsc

flǣsc

cwēn

cwēne, -a

2.6.2.4. u-stems

u-stems included nouns of masculine and feminine genders. Case endings of both genders coincided. The ending of the nominative and accusative singular depended on the shortness or length of the root syllable. In the nominative and accusative singular nouns with a short root syllable had the ending –u, those with a long root syllable had no ending at all.

sunu (son), hand (hand)

Masculine gender

Feminine gender

Case

Sg number

Pl number

Sg number

Pl number

Nom.

sunu

suna

hand

handa

Gen.

suna

suna

handa

handa

Dat.

suna

sunum

handa

handum

Acc.

sunu

suna

hand

handa

u-stems correspond to Latin nouns of the 4-th declension, such as fructus (fruit)