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General characteristics of the ME grammar.
Development of
Nominal categories in ME.
3. The Noun.
4. The
Adjective.
5. The Pronoun.
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General characteristics
The ME period was a transitional
one from OE to NE. It was a period
of swift changes in the English language. We may say that since the OE period the very grammatical type of the language has changed: from a synthetic or inflected language English has developed into the language of analytical type with analytical means of word connection (auxiliary verbs, auxiliary words, change of stress and word-order) prevailing over the synthetic ones.
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The syntax came to play a more important
role in the language than the morphology of the
word. The proportion of the synthetic forms in ME became very small since many of OE synthetic forms had been lost: (1) the grammatical prefixes practically went out of use; (2) suppletive form-building was confined to a few words; (3) sound alternations were not productive and their application was generally reduced; (4) inflexions continued to be used but they were less varied.
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The main direction of development for the nominal
parts of speech – MORPHOLOGICAL SIMPLIFICATION.
Simplifying changes began in
PG, continued in OE and were intensified in ME. The situation in the language gave H. Sweet the right to characterize ME as the period of leveled endings. Many scholars tried to find the reasons for so drastic changes in the morphological system of English. Some of them explained it by the reduction of endings, others – by the changes in the manner of thinking.
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The Russian scholar Prof. A. Smirnitsky considered that
as regards English both factors promote each other under
specific historical conditions of the development of the English language: phonetic reduction was caused by the shift of stress which, in its turn, promoted the changes in morphology. Many morphological forms became homonymous and did not show the difference in the grammatical meaning of the words. These processes were precipitated by the Scandinavian and the Norman conquests.
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Scandinavian dialects were close to English:
the roots
of the words were identical, while the endings were
different. People paid more attention to the root. This promoted weakening and subsequent loss of endings. It can be proved by the fact that the reduction of the morphological suffixes (endings) developed most quickly in the Northern dialects and followed by the changes in Midland. The influence of French was felt mostly in the vocabulary.
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ME division of the words into parts
of speech has in the main remained the same.
The only new part of speech was the article which appeared in Early ME. A special stress should be laid upon the fact that the nominal and the verbal systems developed in widely different way. The morphology of the nominal parts of speech (the noun, the adjective and the pronoun) simplified due to the reduction of vowels in the unstressed positions. Many grammatical categories were lost.
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Other categories underwent simplification. The number of noun
cases was reduced to two as compared with four
cases in OE. The old division into types of declensions disappeared. It should be mentioned that the nominal system by the age of G. Chaucer was very much like the modern. In the verbal system the evolution was less uniform: alongside with many simplifying changes in the verb conjugation, the morphological system was enriched with new grammatical categories.
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Changes in the grammatical categories of nouns. The
OE noun was characterized by gender, number and case
and had a rather complicated system of declensions based on the earlier division into stems and correlated with gender. Gender of nouns in English never was a purely grammatical category. Nouns were not changed according to different genders, but each noun belonged to a certain gender. It was a lexico-grammatical category.
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Nouns belonged to this or that gender in
accordance with the stem of the noun and its
ending. Already in OE nouns of different genders were often similar in form (hand, N; land, F; sand, M) and were distinguishable by the forms of adjectives and pronouns they agreed with. In the XI-XII centuries the gender of nouns was deprived of its main formal support – the weakened/leveled endings of the adjectives, nouns ceased to indicate the gender.
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In Chaucer’s works gender is already a purely
lexical category, like it is in ModE. The gender
is referred to as “he” or “she”, if nouns denote living beings and as “it” if they denote animals or inanimate things. Since the very beginning of the ME period the natural feminine gender of such ME words as wimman, meiden began to prevail over the grammatical masculine and neuter. The other two categories of nouns, case and number, were preserved in a modified shape.
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The category of case. During the ME period
the four-case system which had existed in OE turned
into a two-case system. It was a slow process that took many hundred years. Already in OE there were homonymous forms in some declensions: N. and Acc., both Sg. and Pl. of a-stem declension (N. Sing. stān – A. Sing. stān, N. Pl. stānas – A. Pl. stānas); G., D. and Acc. Sg. of ō-stem declension.
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The loss of cases started with the Northern
dialects where homonymy was very high: not a single
noun had eight case-forms (Table 75, 76)
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The reduction of the morphological suffixes (endings) developed
most quickly in the Northern dialects and followed by
the changes in Midland because Scandinavian dialects were close to English: the roots of the words were identical, while the endings were different. People paid more attention to the root. Under such circumstances the root was the element that would help mutual intercourse while the endings would be an obstacle to it. This promoted weakening and subsequent loss of endings.
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The category of number. It proved to be
the most stable of all the nominal categories. The
noun preserved the distinction of the two numbers (in countables). The plural forms in OE were formed by different endings, depending on the stem and gender (Table 40). The nouns could have in the Nominative plural the endings -as, -a, -u, -e, zero, -an, also sound interchange in the roots of nouns of the corresponding declension (e.g. OE stān – stānas, scip – scipu, sunu – suna, nama - naman).
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In Early ME the choice of the plural
form endings was conditioned not by the stem but
by the gender. Masculine nouns usually had -es; shipes, endes. Feminine nouns had -e (which derived from OE -a, and later turned into -en. Neuter nouns with the short root-vowel had -es (the same ending as Masc. nouns); those with the long root-vowel preserved the zero (historical) ending. In the XIII century the ending -es spread to Fem. and Neuter nouns. The process is called unification (Table 98, ME).
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The ME language was characterized by the division
into numerous dialects; the tempo and direction of changes
were different in various dialects. In the Southern dialects the declensions were rearranged in accordance with gender and largely under the influence of -n - stem nouns; the most frequent endings in the Northern and Midland dialects were -es (from former a-stems). In the XIV century the bulk of nouns took the ending -es in the plural in all the dialects.
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In Late ME the ending –es was
a dominant marker of nouns in the Plural
In Early
NE it extended to more nouns (English words + new words), which built their Plural in different way. Several nouns (former belonging to root stems) however retain their OE Pl. with the mutated vowel (OE mann – menn, foot – feet etc.).
Children, brethren didn’t belong to weak declension!!!
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The Adjective in ME.
The Adjective in ME
underwent greater simplifying changes than any other part of
speech. It lost all its grammatical categories (with the exception of the degrees of comparison). In OE the adjective was declined and had five cases, two numbers and two types of declensions, weak and strong, which helped to distinguish between specific meanings of the nouns they referred to. In late OE the agreement with the noun became weaker and in the XII c. was lost altogether.
The Adj. lost its grammatical categories in the following order: Gender – Case - Number
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In the 14th c.
only four forms
of
adjectives
were preserved:
The difference between strong and weak
forms is shown in the Singular with the help of the ending -e [ə], which was very unstable even in the 14th c. The loss of final -e in Late ME made the adjective an entirely uninflected part of speech.
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In OE the forms of the degrees of
comparison were built with the help of suffixes -ra
for the comparative degree and -ost for the superlative degrees. Sometimes suffixation was accompanied by an alternation of the root vowel. A few adjectives had suppletive forms. In ME the suffixes were weakened to -er and –est correspondingly. The sound alternation became less frequent. Besides, there appeared parallel forms with and without alternation: ME long – lenger - lengest and long – longer - longest. A few adjectives preserved suppletive forms (good, much).
The most important innovation in the adjectival system in ME was the growth of analytical forms of the degrees of comparison (adv. moore /most).
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The Pronoun in ME. In OE personal pronouns
had 3 genders (in the 3rd person Sg.), 4
cases, 3 numbers (Sg., Pl., Dual) in the 1st and the 2nd persons. In ME personal pronouns underwent considerable changes:
1. Dual number pronouns have disappeared (1st person wit, 2nd person ʒit).
2. OE hēō (the feminine pronoun of the third person Sg.) is gradually replaced by the ME shō or shē. The origin of these forms is still disputable. They might have developed from the OE feminine demonstrative pronoun sēo or were borrowed from Scandinavian.
OE hēō (f) > ME hē (f)
OE hē (m) > ME hē (m)
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3. The 3rd person plural pronoun hī is
gradually replaced by the pronoun they (of Scandinavian origin).
The objective case is represented both by hem (of OE origin) and them (Scandinavian).
4. Initial h- of the neuter pronoun hīt is often lost.
5. The Gen. case forms no longer existed in ME, they developed into possessive pronouns. The forms min, thin are used before nouns starting with a vowel, the consonant h or before a pause; my, thy are found before consonants.
6. Dative and Accusative cases collided into one case called the Objective case as both performed the functions of the Object in the sentence. The Nominative case was preserved under its name.
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The Demonstrative pronouns. In OE the so-called adjective
pronouns agreed with the head-noun in case and gender
and some of them in number. In OE the paradigm of demonstrative pronouns included 19 forms, representing 5 cases, three genders, two numbers. In ME all the forms of demonstrative pronouns underwent phonetic and morphological changes which took place due to the reduction of vowels in unstressed positions. Thus they lost the forms of cases (like adjectives) and retained only number and deictic (“far-near”) distinctions: this – that; thes/thise – those.
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The demonstrative pronouns led to the formation of
the definite article. Already in OE these pronouns were
often used as noun-modifiers and very often their demonstrative meaning weakened. This process continued in ME. Bearing no sentence stress these pronouns weakened to the [θә]. There are different points of view as regards the form of the pronoun the article goes back to: to the form sē of masculine gender or þæt of neuter gender.
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Already in OE the demonstrative pronouns had the
additional meaning of definiteness. In ME the “supportive” function
of the demonstrative pronouns was gradually lost because pronouns lost their “marking” force due to the loss of their categories; the demonstrative pronoun acquired new functions – 1) signaling that the word to which it refers is the noun and 2) adding to the noun the meaning of definiteness.
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(
The opposite meaning of indefiniteness began to be
expressed by the numeral ān (in OE had 5
cases), the semantics of which was close to that of indefiniteness. In ME, in some situations, the numeric function of an began to weaken and it gradually turned into the marker of the noun with an additional meaning of indefiniteness. Thus there appeared the new category of definiteness-indefiniteness realized through the opposition of two members – the versus a(n) or ø.