Anglo-Saxon: Difference between revisions
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Anglo-Saxon or Old English ( | Anglo-Saxon or Old English (OE '''Englisc''') is the ancestor of [[Modern English]]. It is a West Germanic Language and like Dutch and Low Saxon (Low German) it did not go through the [[High German Consonant Shift]]. | ||
{{Language| | {{Language| | ||
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}} | }} | ||
=Stages= | |||
English has had 4 primary stages: | |||
* '''Anglo-Saxon''' also known as '''Old English''' | |||
* '''[[Middle English]]''' | |||
* '''[[Early Modern English]]''' | |||
* '''[[Modern English]]''' | |||
The separation of '''Anglo-Saxon''' from '''Middle English''' is marked by [[The Battle of Hastings]] in 1066. The separation of '''Middle English''' and the '''Modern English''' stages is the [[Great Vowel Shift]]. | |||
The | |||
Modern English words have many different origins, but a majority come from [[Anglo-Saxon]], [[Old French|Old Norman French]], and a little [[Old Norse]]. However in the global world today, many words from many other languages have entered the English language. | |||
The most well known text in Anglo-Saxon is that of the Heroic Epic, [[Beowulf]]. Old English literature is known for alliteration | =The People, Dialects, and Literature= | ||
The story was that the British leader Vortigern invited the Saxons to Britain to help fight off the Picts and Scots. A large migration of Saxons, Frisians, Franks, Jutes and Angles later moved from modern Northern Germany, Denmark and the Netherlands to England. The next few centuries they expanded westward constantly and gained more land. The Anglo-Saxons then fought with the Romano-British people already living there until they owned most of Modern England. | |||
In the 9th and 10th centuries, Danish Vikings invaded the Northern parts of England. The [[Old Norse]] influence can still be seen today including things such as the pronoun '''they'''. | |||
The Dialects were split into 4 major ones: Northumbrian, Midlands, Kentish, and West Saxon. The majority of the texts we have are from the West Saxon region. | |||
The most well known text in Anglo-Saxon is that of the Heroic Epic, [[Beowulf]]. Old English literature is known for alliteration. There are many Anglo-Saxon riddles, religious documents, heroic tales, and poems. A chronicle known as the [[Anglo-Saxon Chronicle]] was a chronicle of the events of the Kingdom, and was likely started in the 10th century and was continually updated into the 12th, although there are differences in the key Chronicle documents. | |||
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When the Latin Alphabet was introduced, Anglo-Saxon added two symbols to the Latin alphabet from Runic, those would be "þ" /[[Voiceless dental fricative|θ]]/ and "Ƿ" /[[Labial-velar approximant|w]]/ from runic, called Thorn and Wynn respectively. | When the Latin Alphabet was introduced, Anglo-Saxon added two symbols to the Latin alphabet from Runic, those would be "þ" /[[Voiceless dental fricative|θ]]/ and "Ƿ" /[[Labial-velar approximant|w]]/ from runic, called Thorn and Wynn respectively. | ||
== | ==Phonology== | ||
===Consonants=== | |||
<br/> | |||
<div style="text-align: center;"> | |||
{| style="text-align: center; background: #f9f9f9; border: 1pt solid #c0c0c0;" | |||
!colspan=17 style="text-align:center; background: #efefef;"| Consonants | |||
|- style="vertical-align: center; font-size: x-small; height: 2em" | |||
| ||colspan=2| Bilabial ||colspan=2| Labiod.||colspan=2| Inter-dental||colspan=2| Alveolar||colspan=2| Post-alv. ||colspan=2| Palatal ||colspan=2| Velar ||colspan=2| Glottal | |||
|- | |||
|style="text-align: left; font-size: 95%;"| Nasal || || m || || || || || || n || || || || || || ŋ | |||
|- | |||
|style="text-align: left; font-size: 95%;"| Plosive || p || b || || || || || t || d || || || || || k || g || | |||
|- | |||
|style="text-align: left; font-size: 95%;"| Fricative || || || f || v || θ || ð || s || z || ʃ || (ʒ) || || ç || x || || h | |||
|- | |||
|style="text-align: left; font-size: 95%;"| Affricate || || || || || || || (ʦ) || (ʣ) || ʧ || ʤ || || || | |||
|- | |||
|style="text-align: left; font-size: 95%;"| Approximants & glides || ʍ || w || || || || || || || || || || j | |||
|- | |||
|style="text-align: left; font-size: 95%;"| Trill || || || || || || || ̥r || r || || | |||
|- | |||
|style="text-align: left; font-size: 95%;"| Lateral Approximant || || || || || || || ̥l || l/ɫ | |||
|} | |||
</div> | |||
[[Image:Wynn.png|right|thumb|100px|'''Ƿƿ''' ''wynn'', Old English '''[[Labial-velar approximant|w]]''', which is missing in many Unicode fonts.]] | [[Image:Wynn.png|right|thumb|100px|'''Ƿƿ''' ''wynn'', Old English '''[[Labial-velar approximant|w]]''', which is missing in many Unicode fonts.]] | ||
* Placing '''h-''' before '''r''', '''l''', or '''w'''/'''ƿ''' yields the voiceless form of each sound /̥r ̥l ʍ/. | |||
* When '''c''', '''g''' or '''sc''' are next to a front vowel (most often '''i''' but '''e''' and '''y''' can affect it sometimes too) they become /ʧ j ʃ/ respectively. This is how words like '''gear''' became '''year'''. '''-g''' is often not pronounced or becomes part of a diphtong, such as '''dæg''' /daj/. When it ends with '''-ig''' it has a pronunciation of /-i/, dropping the '''g''' altogether. From this, [[Modern English]] gets the '''-y''' ending (like '''halig''' > '''holy''', '''sceadwig''' > '''shady''', '''manig''' > '''many''') | |||
* The diagraph '''cg''' is pronounced /ʤ/. | |||
* '''þ''' and '''ð''' is pronounced /θ/ except in the case below. | |||
* Fricatives, particularly '''f, þ/ð, s''' are voiceless most of the time /f θ s/, and are voiced intevocalically or adjacent to voiced consonants as /v ð z/. This is why '''v''' and '''f''' were not in Old English. | |||
* '''h''' is pronounaced /ç/ after front vowels and /x/ after back vowels. | |||
* The sound /w/ is often spelt with the letter '''Ƿ'''/'''ƿ''' (wynn). From the Runic Alphabet. | |||
===Vowels=== | |||
<br/> | |||
<div style="text-align: center;"> | |||
{| style="text-align: center; background: #f9f9f9; border: 1pt solid #c0c0c0;" | |||
!colspan=11 style="text-align:center; background: #efefef;"| Vowels | |||
|- | |||
| ||colspan="2"|Front || Central || Back | |||
|- | |||
| || Unround || Rounded || Unrounded || Rounded | |||
|- | |||
| High || iː - i || yː - y || || uː - u | |||
|- | |||
| Mid || eː - e || || ə || oː - o | |||
|- | |||
| Low || æ || || aː/a | |||
|- | |||
| colspan="7"| All entries are: Tense - Lax | |||
|} | |||
</div> | |||
* With a macron the vowel becomes long. | |||
*'''ī''', '''ȳ''', '''ē''', '''ǣ''', '''ā''', '''ō''', and '''ū''' are pronounced /iː yː eː æː aː oː uː/ respectively. | |||
* Without a macron the vowels are short. | |||
* '''i''', '''y''', '''e''', '''æ''', '''a''', '''o''', and '''u''' are pronounced /i y e æ a o u/ or /ɪ ʏ ɛ æ ɔ ʊ/ respectively, depending on the source. | |||
* '''e''' at the end of a word, and unstressed often becomes /ə/. | |||
=Grammar= | =Grammar= | ||
==Nouns== | ==Nouns== | ||
<i> Main Article: [[Anglo-Saxon Nouns]] </i> | |||
===Gender and Number=== | ===Gender and Number=== | ||
There are there Genders in Old English: [[Masculine]], [[Feminine]], and [[Neuter]]. These are the same genders in [[Latin]], as well as modern [[Russian]] and [[High German|German]]. Like most languages which have genders, Nouns which reflect living things are usually indicated in the [[Gender]] of the noun, but a majority is completely random. | There are there Genders in Old English: [[Masculine]], [[Feminine]], and [[Neuter]]. These are the same genders in [[Latin]], as well as modern [[Russian]] and [[High German|German]]. Like most languages which have genders, Nouns which reflect living things are usually indicated in the [[Gender]] of the noun, but a majority is completely random. | ||
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| '''Accusative''' || dæg || dagas || stān || stānas | | '''Accusative''' || dæg || dagas || stān || stānas | ||
|} | |} | ||
¹'''Dæg''' was pronounced much like the word '''Die''' in [[Modern English]], or the Australian/Cockney pronunciation of '''"Day."''' <br> | ¹'''Dæg''' was pronounced much like the word '''Die''' in [[Modern English]], or the Australian/Cockney pronunciation of '''"Day."''' | ||
* Note that both Nouns here are Strong <br> | |||
'''Feminine:''' | '''Feminine:''' | ||
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²'''Hond''' could also be spelt/pronounced '''Hand'''. <br> | ²'''Hond''' could also be spelt/pronounced '''Hand'''. <br> | ||
³'''Ƿ''' could also be spelt '''W''', so '''Ƿynn''' could easily be '''Wynn'''. <br> | ³'''Ƿ''' could also be spelt '''W''', so '''Ƿynn''' could easily be '''Wynn'''. <br> | ||
* Note the '''Hond''' is strong ja-stemmed and '''Wynn''' is regular strong. | |||
'''Neuter:''' | '''Neuter:''' | ||
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| '''Genitive''' || scipes || scipa || dēores || dēora | | '''Genitive''' || scipes || scipa || dēores || dēora | ||
|- | |- | ||
| '''Dative''' || scipe || scipum || | | '''Dative''' || scipe || scipum || dēore || dēorum | ||
|- | |- | ||
| '''Accusative''' || scip || scipu || | | '''Accusative''' || scip || scipu || dēor || dēor | ||
|} | |} | ||
⁴'''Scip''' is pronounced the same way as the modern equivalent, '''Ship'''. <br> | ⁴'''Scip''' is pronounced the same way as the modern equivalent, '''Ship'''. <br> | ||
⁵'''Dēor''', related to the German word '''Tier''' (animal), slowly became used for game animals, and later becomes '''Deer''' in Modern English. <br> | ⁵'''Dēor''', related to the German word '''Tier''' (animal), slowly became used for game animals, and later becomes '''Deer''' in Modern English. <br> | ||
* Note that both nouns are strong here. | |||
==Articles== | ==Articles== | ||
During the earlier ages of the Anglo-Saxon language, there were no articles. Later, especially after the Viking invasion and towards the end of the Anglo-Saxon era, articles were developed. They too declined by case and number, and included the [[Instrumental]] case, which was the same as Dative Nouns. Here are the articles: | During the earlier ages of the Anglo-Saxon language, there were no articles. Later, especially after the Viking invasion and towards the end of the Anglo-Saxon era, articles were developed. They too declined by case and number, and included the [[Instrumental]] case, which was the same as Dative Nouns. This also includes the meaning of '''that''' in the demonstrative sense. Here are the articles: | ||
{| class="bluetable {{{1}}}" border="1" cellpadding="2" | {| class="bluetable {{{1}}}" border="1" cellpadding="2" | ||
|- | |- | ||
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! Plural (all Genders) | ! Plural (all Genders) | ||
|- | |- | ||
| '''Nominative''' || | | '''Nominative''' || sē || sēo || ðæt || ðā | ||
|- | |- | ||
| '''Genitive''' || ðæs || ðǣre || ðæs || ðāra, ðǣra | | '''Genitive''' || ðæs || ðǣre || ðæs || ðāra, ðǣra | ||
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==Verbs== | ==Verbs== | ||
<i> Main Page: [[Anglo-Saxon Verbs]] <i> | |||
===Verbal Comparison, Patterns, and General Overview=== | ===Verbal Comparison, Patterns, and General Overview=== | ||
Like nouns and adjectives, Verbs have [[Strong]] and [[Weak]] forms. The Strong forms usually involve vowel shifts in the stem, even in the present tense. It is also inflected based on [[person]], [[number]], [[tense]], and [[mood]]. | Like nouns and adjectives, Verbs have [[Strong]] and [[Weak]] forms. The Strong forms usually involve vowel shifts in the stem, even in the present tense. It is also inflected based on [[person]], [[number]], [[tense]], and [[mood]]. | ||
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| || sing. || pl. || sing. || pl. | | || sing. || pl. || sing. || pl. | ||
|- | |- | ||
| '''1st person''' || lufie || lufiað || fremme || | | '''1st person''' || lufie || lufiað || fremme || fremmað | ||
|- | |- | ||
| '''2nd person''' || lufast || lufiað || fremest || | | '''2nd person''' || lufast || lufiað || fremest || fremmað | ||
|- | |- | ||
| '''3rd person''' || lufað || lufiað || fremeð || | | '''3rd person''' || lufað || lufiað || fremeð || fremmað | ||
|- | |- | ||
| colspan="5" align="center"|'''Past tense''' | | colspan="5" align="center"|'''Past tense''' | ||
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| || sing. || pl. || sing. || pl. | | || sing. || pl. || sing. || pl. | ||
|- | |- | ||
| '''1st person''' || lufode || lufodon || fremede || | | '''1st person''' || lufode || lufodon || fremede || fremedon | ||
|- | |- | ||
| '''2nd person''' || lufodest || lufodon || fremedest || | | '''2nd person''' || lufodest || lufodon || fremedest || fremedon | ||
|- | |- | ||
| '''3rd person''' || lufode || lufodon || fremede || | | '''3rd person''' || lufode || lufodon || fremede || fremedon | ||
|} | |} | ||
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| '''3rd person''' || bið || bēoð || is || sind, sindon | | '''3rd person''' || bið || bēoð || is || sind, sindon | ||
|- | |- | ||
| colspan="5" align="center"|'''Past Tense''' | | colspan="5" align="center"|'''Past Tense''' (for both) | ||
|- | |- | ||
| || colspan="2"| sing. ||colspan="2"| pl. | | || colspan="2"| sing. ||colspan="2"| pl. | ||
|- | |- | ||
| '''1st person''' || || | | '''1st person''' || colspan="2"| wæs ||colspan="2"| wǣron | ||
|- | |- | ||
| '''2nd person''' || || | | '''2nd person''' || colspan="2"| wǣre || colspan="2"| wǣron | ||
|- | |- | ||
| '''3rd person''' || || | | '''3rd person''' || colspan="2"| wæs || colspan="2"|wǣron | ||
|} | |} | ||
=Texts= | |||
There are many primary texts in Anglo-Saxon. The most famous of which would be [[Beowulf]]. Other text's include, ''The Wife's Lament'', ''The Wanderer'', ''The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle'', ''Judith'', ''Cædmon's Hymn'', just to name a few. | |||
=Sources and External Links= | =Sources and External Links= | ||
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Faind [[Anggloo-Saksyn|dhys peedx]] in [[Tawyr Oorthaagryfii]]. | Faind [[Anggloo-Saksyn|dhys peedx]] in [[Tawyr Oorthaagryfii]]. | ||
[[Category: | {{Natlangs}} | ||
[[Category:Linguistics]] | |||
[[Category:Germanic natlangs]] |
Latest revision as of 08:46, 6 November 2012
Anglo-Saxon or Old English (OE Englisc) is the ancestor of Modern English. It is a West Germanic Language and like Dutch and Low Saxon (Low German) it did not go through the High German Consonant Shift.
Anglo-Saxon Englisc | |
Spoken in: | Anglo-Land (England) (Angelcynn) |
Conworld: | Real world |
Total speakers: | unknown |
Genealogical classification: | Indo-European
|
Basic word order: | Unimportant/V2 |
Morphological type: | inflecting |
Morphosyntactic alignment: | nominative-accusative |
Writing system: | |
Created by: | |
unknown | 400-1066 C.E. |
Stages
English has had 4 primary stages:
- Anglo-Saxon also known as Old English
- Middle English
- Early Modern English
- Modern English
The separation of Anglo-Saxon from Middle English is marked by The Battle of Hastings in 1066. The separation of Middle English and the Modern English stages is the Great Vowel Shift.
Modern English words have many different origins, but a majority come from Anglo-Saxon, Old Norman French, and a little Old Norse. However in the global world today, many words from many other languages have entered the English language.
The People, Dialects, and Literature
The story was that the British leader Vortigern invited the Saxons to Britain to help fight off the Picts and Scots. A large migration of Saxons, Frisians, Franks, Jutes and Angles later moved from modern Northern Germany, Denmark and the Netherlands to England. The next few centuries they expanded westward constantly and gained more land. The Anglo-Saxons then fought with the Romano-British people already living there until they owned most of Modern England.
In the 9th and 10th centuries, Danish Vikings invaded the Northern parts of England. The Old Norse influence can still be seen today including things such as the pronoun they.
The Dialects were split into 4 major ones: Northumbrian, Midlands, Kentish, and West Saxon. The majority of the texts we have are from the West Saxon region.
The most well known text in Anglo-Saxon is that of the Heroic Epic, Beowulf. Old English literature is known for alliteration. There are many Anglo-Saxon riddles, religious documents, heroic tales, and poems. A chronicle known as the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle was a chronicle of the events of the Kingdom, and was likely started in the 10th century and was continually updated into the 12th, although there are differences in the key Chronicle documents.
There is no standard spelling in Anglo-Saxon, so many words had more than one spelling.
Orthography and Phonology
Runic
Early forms of Anglo-Saxon writing was in Runic. It was an expansion of the original 24 rune Fuþark, and had become Fuþorc. Because the language had shifted to include new sounds, the alphabet itself shifted and included several new letters that had not been in the Elder Fuþark. However they did not develop the one Staff system similar to the runic designs in Norway, Sweden and Denmark.
When the Latin Alphabet was introduced, Anglo-Saxon added two symbols to the Latin alphabet from Runic, those would be "þ" /θ/ and "Ƿ" /w/ from runic, called Thorn and Wynn respectively.
Phonology
Consonants
Consonants | ||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bilabial | Labiod. | Inter-dental | Alveolar | Post-alv. | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | |||||||||
Nasal | m | n | ŋ | |||||||||||||
Plosive | p | b | t | d | k | g | ||||||||||
Fricative | f | v | θ | ð | s | z | ʃ | (ʒ) | ç | x | h | |||||
Affricate | (ʦ) | (ʣ) | ʧ | ʤ | ||||||||||||
Approximants & glides | ʍ | w | j | |||||||||||||
Trill | ̥r | r | ||||||||||||||
Lateral Approximant | ̥l | l/ɫ |
- Placing h- before r, l, or w/ƿ yields the voiceless form of each sound /̥r ̥l ʍ/.
- When c, g or sc are next to a front vowel (most often i but e and y can affect it sometimes too) they become /ʧ j ʃ/ respectively. This is how words like gear became year. -g is often not pronounced or becomes part of a diphtong, such as dæg /daj/. When it ends with -ig it has a pronunciation of /-i/, dropping the g altogether. From this, Modern English gets the -y ending (like halig > holy, sceadwig > shady, manig > many)
- The diagraph cg is pronounced /ʤ/.
- þ and ð is pronounced /θ/ except in the case below.
- Fricatives, particularly f, þ/ð, s are voiceless most of the time /f θ s/, and are voiced intevocalically or adjacent to voiced consonants as /v ð z/. This is why v and f were not in Old English.
- h is pronounaced /ç/ after front vowels and /x/ after back vowels.
- The sound /w/ is often spelt with the letter Ƿ/ƿ (wynn). From the Runic Alphabet.
Vowels
Vowels | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Front | Central | Back | ||||||||
Unround | Rounded | Unrounded | Rounded | |||||||
High | iː - i | yː - y | uː - u | |||||||
Mid | eː - e | ə | oː - o | |||||||
Low | æ | aː/a | ||||||||
All entries are: Tense - Lax |
- With a macron the vowel becomes long.
- ī, ȳ, ē, ǣ, ā, ō, and ū are pronounced /iː yː eː æː aː oː uː/ respectively.
- Without a macron the vowels are short.
- i, y, e, æ, a, o, and u are pronounced /i y e æ a o u/ or /ɪ ʏ ɛ æ ɔ ʊ/ respectively, depending on the source.
- e at the end of a word, and unstressed often becomes /ə/.
Grammar
Nouns
Main Article: Anglo-Saxon Nouns
Gender and Number
There are there Genders in Old English: Masculine, Feminine, and Neuter. These are the same genders in Latin, as well as modern Russian and German. Like most languages which have genders, Nouns which reflect living things are usually indicated in the Gender of the noun, but a majority is completely random.
The two numbers of Anglo-Saxon are Singular and Plural. Pronouns have the Dual number as well.
Cases
Unlike Modern English, Anglo-Saxon was filled with noun inflections denoting the case of the noun. The only one that survived through the Middle English era was the -'s ending denoting the original Genitive case. The cases were Nominative, Accusative, Genitive, and Dative.
Strong and Weak
Like with Verbs, Anglo-Saxon had many nouns which changed their stems, both in the plural and sometimes during some of the cases of the singular. These are the reasons for irregular nouns in Modern English with stem changes, such as Man-Men (AS Mann-Menn in Nom.). This is often how Anglo-Saxon nouns are categorized.
Example charts
Masculine:
Cases | Dæg¹ 'Day' | Dagas 'Days' | Stān 'Stone' | Stānas 'Stones' |
---|---|---|---|---|
Nominative | dæg | dagas | stān | stānas |
Genitive | dæges | daga | stānes | stāna |
Dative | dæge | dagum | stāne | stānum |
Accusative | dæg | dagas | stān | stānas |
¹Dæg was pronounced much like the word Die in Modern English, or the Australian/Cockney pronunciation of "Day."
- Note that both Nouns here are Strong
Feminine:
Cases | Hond² 'Hand' | Honda 'Hands' | Ƿynn³ 'Joy' | Ƿynna 'Joys' |
---|---|---|---|---|
Nominative | hond | hondu | Ƿynn | Ƿynna |
Genitive | honda | honda | Ƿynne | Ƿynna |
Dative | honda | hondum | Ƿynne | Ƿynnum |
Accusative | hond | honda | Ƿynne | Ƿynna |
²Hond could also be spelt/pronounced Hand.
³Ƿ could also be spelt W, so Ƿynn could easily be Wynn.
- Note the Hond is strong ja-stemmed and Wynn is regular strong.
Neuter:
Cases | Scip⁴ 'Ship' | Scipu 'Ships' | Dēor⁵ 'Animal' | Dēor 'Animals' |
---|---|---|---|---|
Nominative | scip | scipu | dēor | dēor |
Genitive | scipes | scipa | dēores | dēora |
Dative | scipe | scipum | dēore | dēorum |
Accusative | scip | scipu | dēor | dēor |
⁴Scip is pronounced the same way as the modern equivalent, Ship.
⁵Dēor, related to the German word Tier (animal), slowly became used for game animals, and later becomes Deer in Modern English.
- Note that both nouns are strong here.
Articles
During the earlier ages of the Anglo-Saxon language, there were no articles. Later, especially after the Viking invasion and towards the end of the Anglo-Saxon era, articles were developed. They too declined by case and number, and included the Instrumental case, which was the same as Dative Nouns. This also includes the meaning of that in the demonstrative sense. Here are the articles:
Cases | Masculine | Feminine | Neuter | Plural (all Genders) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Nominative | sē | sēo | ðæt | ðā |
Genitive | ðæs | ðǣre | ðæs | ðāra, ðǣra |
Dative | ðǣm | ðǣre | ðǣm | ðǣm, ðām |
Accusative | ðone | ðā | ðæt | ðā |
Instrumental | ðē, ðon | ðǣre | ðē, ðon | ðǣm, ðām |
Personal Pronouns
Personal pronouns in Anglo-Saxon are quite different than Modern English. They too are declined according to the four major cases, but also have an extra number illustration when there 2, Dual. With the dual, the verbs take the plural endings, and it only applies to the first and second person pronouns. Here are the Charts for the Pronouns:
First person:
Cases | Singular | Dual | Plural |
---|---|---|---|
Nominative | ic, ih | Ƿit, wit | Ƿē, wē |
Genitive | mīn | uncer | ūre |
Dative | mē | unc | ūs |
Accusative | mē | unc | ūs |
Second person:
Cases | Singular | Dual | Plural |
---|---|---|---|
Nominative | þū | git | gē |
Genitive | þīn | incer | ēoǷer, ēower |
Dative | þē | inc | ēoǷ, ēow |
Accusative | þē | inc | ēoǷ, ēow |
Third person:
Cases | Mascu. Sing. | Fem. Sing. | Neut. Sing. | Plural |
---|---|---|---|---|
Nominative | hē | hēo | hit | hīe |
Genitive | his | hiere | his | hiera |
Dative | him | hiere | him | him, heom |
Accusative | hine | hīe | hit | hīe |
Adjectives
Adjectives also decline by gender, number, and case. Because one adjective has to cover all three genders, two numbers, and four (five with the Strong) cases, there are more adjective forms than there are any other part of speech, with the possible exception of the verb. They too have Strong and Weak forms and can have root vowel stems which are umlauted. The plurals of the Weak forms are uniform across genders, but not in the Strong forms. The same adjective could be Weak or Strong depending on context and the noun.
Examples
Gōd = Good
Weak:
Cases | Masculine | Feminine | Neuter | Plural (all Genders) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Nominative | gōda | gōde | gōde | gōdan |
Genitive | gōdan | gōdan | gōdan | gōdena |
Dative | gōdan | gōdan | gōdan | gōdum |
Accusative | gōdan | gōdan | gōde | gōdan |
Strong:
Cases | Masculine | Feminine | Neuter | Pl. Masc. | Pl. Fem. | Pl. Neut. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nominative | gōd | gōd | gōd | gōde | gōda | gōd |
Genitive | gōdes | gōdre | gōdes | gōdra | gōdra | gōdra |
Dative | gōdum | gōdre | gōdum | gōdum | gōdum | gōdum |
Accusative | gōdne | gōde | gōd | gōde | gōda | gōd |
Instrumental | gōde | gōdre | gōde | gōdum | gōdum | gōdum |
Prepositions and Conjunctions
Here is a list of Prepositions and Conjuctions.
Prepositions
æt - (dat.) at, from, (acc.) until, to
tō - (dat.) to, towards, at,
wið, wiþ - against,
æfter - (dat.) after,
on - (dat.) in, on, (acc.) into, onto
mid - (dat.) with,
of - (dat.) of, from,
be - (dat. and acc.) by, near, along, about,
beforan - (dat. and acc.) before, ahead of
fram - (dat.) from, by,
ofer - (dat.) over, upon (acc.) over to, across,
þurh - (acc.) through
under - (dat.) under (acc.) under,
ymbe - (acc.) near, by, about,
in - (dat.) in, (acc.) into,
būtan - (dat. or acc.) outside, except, without,
betweox - (dat. or acc.) between, among,
binnan - (dat.) within, (acc.) to within,
oð - (acc.) up to, until,
geond - (acc.) through, throughout,
bufan (dat.) above, (acc.) upwards,
innan - (dat.) within (acc.) into,
Conjunctions
æfter - after,
ǣr - before
gif - if,
hwæðer, hwæþer - whether
þā, ðā - when,
hwīle - while,
swā - as, such, (this word has a phonetic/semantic cognate in Old Norse, sva.)
swelce - as if,
þæt, ðæt - that, so that,
þǣr, ðǣr - where,
þēah, ðēah - though,
siððan, siþþan - since, after, (this one is also in Old Norse and Middle English such as the first line in Sir Gawayn and the Grene Knyght.)
Verbs
Main Page: Anglo-Saxon Verbs
Verbal Comparison, Patterns, and General Overview
Like nouns and adjectives, Verbs have Strong and Weak forms. The Strong forms usually involve vowel shifts in the stem, even in the present tense. It is also inflected based on person, number, tense, and mood.
It is known for having -st in the second person, which was used for thou in the Middle English era. It is also used in German for the du form, which is the cognate to þū and thou (which is also a cognate to Latin tu). Anglo-Saxon Verbs are known for the signature -ð/-þ ending in the 3rd person singular, which was also used into the Early Modern English era, which Shakespeare is apart of, examples from that era include the words: hath, goeth, doth, knoweth, etc.
The infinitive ending is commonly -an or -en, which is similar to the modern German -en infinitive ending. Also the orthographic cognate ge- is used in both German and Anglo-Saxon to represent the past tense, even if they are not pronounced the same way, and in Standard High German, the prefix is required, whereas the Anglo-Saxon one is more optional. The Weak past tense marker inserts -ed-, whereas the Strong past tense usually involves a vowel change.
Although Anglo-Saxon did have the Subjunctive and Imperative, the examples shall be focused on the Present and Past tenses.
Weak Examples
Present tense | ||||
Infinitive | Lufian to love | Fremman to do | ||
sing. | pl. | sing. | pl. | |
1st person | lufie | lufiað | fremme | fremmað |
2nd person | lufast | lufiað | fremest | fremmað |
3rd person | lufað | lufiað | fremeð | fremmað |
Past tense | ||||
sing. | pl. | sing. | pl. | |
1st person | lufode | lufodon | fremede | fremedon |
2nd person | lufodest | lufodon | fremedest | fremedon |
3rd person | lufode | lufodon | fremede | fremedon |
Strong Examples
Present tense | ||||
Infinitive | Singan to sing | Niman to take | ||
sing. | pl. | sing. | pl. | |
1st person | singe | singað | nime | nimað |
2nd person | singest | singað | nimest | nimað |
3rd person | singeð | singað | nimeð | nimað |
Past Tense | ||||
sing. | pl. | sing. | pl. | |
1st person | sang | sungon | nam | nāmon |
2nd person | sunge | sungon | nāme | nāmon |
3rd person | sang | sungon | nam | nāmon |
The Verb Bēon and Wesan
There are two forms of the verb to be in Anglo-Saxon. They both share the same past tense, rooted in wesan. The verb form wesan was preserved in the past tense, in the form of was and were.
These verb forms were also preserved into the Middle English era, in an Epic called Brut:
"Al swa muchel thu bist woruh, swa thu velden ært."
(All as much thou art worth, as thou kind art)
You are worth as much as you are kind.
Present tense | ||||
Infinitive | Bēon to be | Wesan to be | ||
sing. | pl. | sing. | pl. | |
1st person | bēo | bēoð | eom | sind, sindon |
2nd person | bist | bēoð | eart | sind, sindon |
3rd person | bið | bēoð | is | sind, sindon |
Past Tense (for both) | ||||
sing. | pl. | |||
1st person | wæs | wǣron | ||
2nd person | wǣre | wǣron | ||
3rd person | wæs | wǣron |
Texts
There are many primary texts in Anglo-Saxon. The most famous of which would be Beowulf. Other text's include, The Wife's Lament, The Wanderer, The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, Judith, Cædmon's Hymn, just to name a few.
Sources and External Links
http://www.omniglot.com/writing/oldenglish.htm
http://www.omniglot.com/writing/runic.htm#futhorc
http://www.utexas.edu/cola/centers/lrc/eieol/engol-0-X.html
http://members.tripod.com/babaev/archive/grammar43.html
http://home.comcast.net/~modean52/index.htm
http://www.wmich.edu/medieval/resources/IOE/index.html
Finegan, Edward. "English." The World’s Major Languages. Ed. Bernard Comrie. New York, NY Oxford University Press, 1990
Atherton, Mark. Teach Yourself Old English. Coventry, England, McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.: 2006.
Page written by Timothy Patrick Snyder.
Translations
Faind dhys peedx in Tawyr Oorthaagryfii.
This article is one of quite a few pages about Natlangs. Indo-european natlangs:
Uralic Natlangs: Finnish * Khanty * Mansi * Mordvinic * Proto-Uralic
Isolate Natlangs: Basque * * |