Lecture 1 The Purpose of Studying. The Main Peculiarities of the Germanic Languages 1. Subject and aims of the History of English. The English language of today reflects many centuries of development. The political and social events that have in the course of English history so profoundly affected the English people in their national life have generally had a recognizable effect on their language. Among these events we can name such as: the Christianity of Britain in 597 that brought England into contact with Latin civilization, the Scandinavian invasions that resulted in a considerable mixture of the two races and their languages, the Norman conquest that made English for two centuries the language of the lower classes, while the nobles used French. In a similar way the development of England as a maritime power, the expansion of the British Empire, the growth of commerce and industry, of science and literature, each in its way contributed to make English what it is today. Thus, the English language reflects in its entire development the political, social, and cultural history of the English people. This course covers the main events in the historical development of the English Language: the history of its phonetic structure and spelling, the evolution of its grammatical system, the growth of its vocabulary, and also the changing historical conditions of Englishspeaking communities relevant to language history. The object of The History of the English Language is the English Language itself, its phonetic, grammatical and lexical aspects. The subject of The History of the English Language is: main changes in the phonetic structure and spelling of the language at different stages of the development of the language; the evolution of the grammatical system; the growth and development of the vocabulary. All these changes are considered against the background of the main historical events that took place in the country. A language can be considered from different angles. In studying Modern English we regard the language as fixed in time and describe each linguistic level – phonetics, grammar or lexis taking no account of the origin of present-day features or a tendency to change. The synchronic approach can be contrasted to the diachronic. When considered diachronically every linguistic fact is interpreted as a step in the never ending evolution of language. A language can be studied synchronically: a certain period in the history of the development of a language is taken (fixed time boundaries) – horizontal study; Page 1 / 17 each level of a language is studied (phonetics, grammar, lexicon); different functional varieties of a language are studied (different dialects of this period). or diachronically: all periods in the history of the development of a language are taken – vertical study; only one level of a language is studied (phonetics or grammar or lexicon); only one functional variety of a language is studied (e.g. Standard English). These two types of studying a language are closely interconnected and create a full picture of the development of a language. Through learning the history of the English language the student achieves a variety of aims: theoretical and practical. One of the aims is to provide the student with the knowledge of linguistic history sufficient to account for the principal features of presentday English. While studying modern English we find in its vocabulary, phonetic and grammatical structure a number of phenomena difficult to understand. It is very difficult to read English words as the written form of the English word is conventional rather than phonetic. e.g. bit-[ bit]- 3 letters, 3 sounds (we see full correspondence between Latin letters and English sounds) bite-[bait]- 4 letters, 3 sounds (we see no correspondence between the vowels and their graphic representation , the final -e is not pronounced, but conventionally serves to show that the preceding letter -i has its English alphabetic value which is [ai], not [i] as in other languages). knight - [nait] - 6 letters, 3 sounds (we see the letters k and gh do not stand for any sounds but gh evidently shows that i stands for [ai]). At the time when the Latin alphabet was introduced into Britain (7 cent.) its letters were used on a phonetic principle and their significance was the same as in Latin, i.e. the letters stood, roughly, for the same sounds as in Latin. Later, after the introduction of printing in the 15th century, the written form of the word became fixed, while the sounds continued to change. This resulted in a growing discrepancy between letter and sound and in the modern peculiar use of Latin letters in English. Many modern spellings show how the words were pronounced some four or five hundred years ago, e.g. in the 14th centuries knight sounded as [knix't], root as [ro:t], tale as ['ta:lə]. Another illustration may be drawn from the vocabulary. Since English belongs to the Germanic group of languages, it would be natural to expect that it has many words or roots in common with German, Swedish, Danish. In English summer, in Page 2 / 17 German Sommer, long-lang,etc. We also find many words in common with the Romance languages: French, Latin, Spanish: peace (English) - pace (Latin, Italian), army (English) - amee (French), armata (Italian). The history of English accounts for these and other peculiarities. The history of English will say when and how these borrowings were made. As for grammar , the history of English will supply explanations both for the general features of the grammatical structure and for its specific peculiarities. It will explain why English has so few inflections; how its analytical structure arose - with an abundance of compound forms and a fixed word order; why modal verbs take no ending -s in the 3rd person singular; why some nouns add -en or change the root-vowel in the plural instead of adding -s (e.g. oxen, feet) and so on and so forth. The theoretical aim of the course is to supply the student with all necessary to consider such problems as 1) the relationship between statics and dynamics in language; 2) the role of linguistic and extralinguistic factors; 3) the interdependence of different processes in language history. The history of English is connected with other disciplines. It is connected with the history of England, connecting the development of English with concrete historical conditions of English people’s life. The history of English is closely connected with theoretical grammar, phonetics and lexicology. 2. Evolution of language and scope of language history The evolution or historical development of language is made up of diverse facts and processes. Firstly it includes the internal or structural development of the language system, the inner history. The description of internal linguistic history is usually presented in accordance with the division of language into linguistic levels. The main levels are: the phonetic and phonological levels; the morphological level, the syntactic level, and the lexical level. So the History of the language can be subdivided into historical phonetics, historical morphology, historical syntax and historical lexicology. The evolution of language includes also many facts which pertain to the functioning of language in the speech community and these functional aspects constitute the “external” or “outer” history of the language and embrace a large number of diverse matters: the spread of the language in geographical and social space; the differentiation of language into functional varieties (geographical variants, dialects, standard and sub-standards); contacts with other languages. In discussing these aspects of history we shall deal with the concept of language space, that is the geographical and social space occupied by the language (known as its horizontal and vertical dimensions; and also with the concept of linguistic situation. Page 3 / 17 Linguistic situation embraces the functional differentiation of language and the relationships between the functional varieties. Most of these features are connected with the history of the speech community e.g. with the structure of society, the migration of tribes, economic and political events; the growth of culture and literature. 3. Connections The History of the English Language is interconnected with other linguistic and non-linguistic disciplines: 1. General Linguistics – provides us with general linguistic laws and rules valid for and language. 2. History – historical events that take place in a country influence to a great extent the language of this country. 3. Theoretical Phonetics – provides us with main phonetic notions and helps to explain phonetic phenomena. 4. Theoretical Grammar – provides us with main grammatical notions and helps to explain grammatical phenomena. 5. Lexicology - provides us with main lexicological notions and helps to explain lexical phenomena. 6. Cultural Studies – helps to understand better the connection between the culture and the language of the country and their mutual influence. 7. Literature – gives us examples of the languages of this or that historical period and these works of literature serve as the material for the language research. 4. Modern Germanic Languages. We are going to speak about the inner and the outer history of the English language. The outer history of the language is the events in the life (history) of the people speaking this language affecting the language, i.e. the history of the people reflected in in their language. The inner history of the language is the description of the changes in the language itself, its grammar, phonetics, vocabulary or spelling. Languages can be classified according to different principles. The historical classification groups languages in accordance with origin from a common linguistic ancestor. Genetically, English belongs to the Germanic or Teutonic group of languages, which is one of the groups of the IE linguistic family. Most of the area of Europe and large parts of other continents are occupied today by the IE languages, Germanic being one of their major groups. The Germanic languages in the modern world are as follows: English− in Great Britain, Ireland, the USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, the South African Republic, and many other former British colonies and dominions; German− in Germany, Austria, Luxemburg, Liechtenstein /'likt(ə)nstain/ and Switzerland; Page 4 / 17 Netherlandish− in the Netherlands and Flanders (Belgium) (known also as Dutch and Flemish respectively); Afrikaans− in the South African Republic; Danish− in Denmark; Swedish− in Sweden and Finland; Norwegian −in Norway; Icelandic− in Iceland; Frisian− in some regions of the Netherlands and Germany; Faroese− in the Faroe Islands; Yiddish− in different countries. Lists of Germanic languages given in manuals and reference-books differ in some points, for the distinction between separate languages, and also between languages and dialects varies. Until recently Dutch and Flemish were named as separate languages; Frisian and Faroese are often referred to as dialects, since they are spoken over small, politically dependent areas; the linguistic independence of Norwegian is questioned, for it has intermixed with Danish; Br E and Am E are sometimes regarded as two independent languages. It is difficult to estimate the number of people speaking Germanic languages, especially on account of English, which in many countries is one of two languages in a bilingual community, e.g. in Canada. The estimates for English range from 250 to 300 million people who have it as their mother tongue. The total number of people speaking Germanic languages approaches 440 million. To this rough estimate we could add an indefinite number of bilingual people in the countries where English is used as an official language (over 50 countries). All the Germanic languages are related through their common origin and joint development at the early stages of history. The survey of their external history will show where and when the Germanic languages arose and acquired their common features and also how they have developed into modern independent tongues. 5. The earliest period of Germanic history. Proto-Germanic. The Proto-Germanic Language (PG) is supposed to have split form the IndoEuropean Language (IE) some time between 15th and 10th c. B.C. The Ancient Germans (the Teutons) moved further north and settled on the southern coast of the Baltic Sea and in the region of the Elbe. The Proto-Germanic Language has never been recorded in written form. In the th 19 c. it was reconstructed by means of comparative linguistics. With time the dialectal differences among the Germanic tribes grew because of the migration and geographical expansion. The reasons for this migration and expansion were: overpopulation in the areas of the original settlement; Page 5 / 17 poor agricultural techniques; scanty natural resources in the areas of the original settlement; The earliest migration of the Germanic tribes from the region of the Elbe was to the Scandinavian Peninsula. As a result, 2 branches of the Proto-Germanic Language appeared: southern branch (those who remained in the region of the Elbe); northern branch (those who moved northwards, to the Scandinavian Peninsula). Later some of the tribes returned to the mainland and settled east of the other Germanic tribes. As a result, the Proto-Germanic Language split into 3 branches: East Germanic Languages (those who returned and settled in the east); North Germanic Languages (those who moved northwards, to the Scandinavian Peninsula, and stayed there); West Germanic Languages (those who never left the mainland). The external history of the ancient Teutons around the beginning of our era is known from classical writings. The first mention of Germanic tribes was made by Pitheas, a Greek historian and geographer of the 4th century B.C., in an account of a sea voyage to the Baltic Sea. In the 1st century B.C. in COMMENTARIES ON THE GALLIC WAR (COMMENTARII DE BELLO GALLICO) Julius Caesar described some militant Germanic tribes, who boarded on the Celts of Gaul in the North-East. The tribal names Germans and Teutons, at first applied to separate tribes, were later extended to the entire group. In the 1st century A.D. Pliny the Elder, a prominent Roman scientist and writer, in NATURAL HISTORY (NATURALIS HISTORIA) made a classified list of Germanic tribes grouping them under six headings. A few decades later the Roman historian Tacitus compiled a detailed description of the life and customs of the ancient Teutons DE SITU MORIBUS ET POPULIS GERMANIAE; in this work he reproduced Pliny's classification of the Germanic tribes. 6. Old Germanic Languages East Germanic The East Germanic subgroup was formed by the tribes who returned from Scandinavia at the beginning of our era. The most numerous and powerful of them were the Goths. They were among the first Teutons to leave the coast of the Baltic Sea and start on their great migrations. Around 200 A.D. they moved south-east and some time later reached the lower basin of the Danube, where they made attacks on the Eastern Roman Empire, Byzantium. Their western branch, the Visigotae, invaded Roman territory, moved on to southern Gaul. The eastern Goths, Ostrogotae consolidated into a powerful tribal alliance in the lower basin of the Dniester, were subjugated by the Huns under Attila, traversed the Balkans and set up a kingdom in Northern Italy, with Ravenna as its Page 6 / 17 capital. The short-lived flourishing of Ostrogothic culture in the 5th-6th century came to an end with the fall of the kingdom. The Gothic language, now dead, has been preserved in written records of the 4th6th century. The Goths were the first of the Teutons to become Christian. In the 4th century Ulfilas, a West-Gothic bishop, made a translation of the Gospels from Greek into Gothic using a modified form of the Greek alphabet. Parts of Ulfilas‘ Gospels - a manuscript of about two hundred pages, probably made in the 5th or 6th century - have been preserved and are kept now in Sweden. It is written on red parchment with silver and golden letters and is known as the SILVER CODEX. The SILVER CODEX is one of the earliest texts in the languages of the Germanic group; it represents a form of language very close to PG and therefore throws light on the pre-written stages of history of all the languages of the Germanic group, including English. The other East Germanic languages, all of which are now dead, have left no written traces. Some of their tribal names have survived in place-names, which reveal the directions of their migrations: Bornholm and Burgundy go back to the East Germanic tribe of Burgundies; Andalusia is derived from the tribal name Vandals; Lombardy got its name from the Langobards, who made part of the population of the Ostrogothic kingdom in Northern Italy. North Germanic The Teutons who stayed in Scandinavia after the departure of the Goths gave rise to the North Germanic subgroup of languages. The North Germanic tribes settled on the southern coast of Scandinavia and in Northern Denmark (since the 4th c. A.D.). They lived relatively isolated and showed little dialectal variation at that time. There existed one common language – Old Norse/Old Scandinavian. It had the following characteristics: It used the original Germanic Alphabet called the Runes/the Runic Alphabet. It appeared in the 3rd – 4th c. A.D. It has come down to us in runic inscriptions – separate words written/carved on objects made of wood, stone, metal. It was spoken by all North Germanic tribes. In the 9th – 10th c. A.D. the Scandinavians started their voyages to America and islands in the Atlantic Ocean (Leif Ericson, a Scandinavia raider, was the first to land on the American Continent). In addition to this overpopulation in the fjord areas caused the migration of the people to inner Scandinavia. This provoked the beginning of the linguistic differentiation. In Scandinavia the linguistic division corresponded to the political division: there were 3 kingdoms (Sweden, Denmark and Norway) that were Page 7 / 17 constantly fighting for dominance and they had 3 respective languages (earliest records in these languages date back to the 13th c.): Old Danish – later it developed into Danish (now the national language of Denmark); Old Swedish - later it developed into Swedish (now the national language of Sweden and a part of Finland); Old Norwegian – was the last to develop, later transformed into Norwegian (now the national language of Norway). In the 8th c. A.D. sea-rovers and merchants founded numerous colonies on the islands in the North Sea and in the Atlantic Ocean (the Shetland Islands, the Orkneys, the Faroe Islands) and reached even Iceland and Greenland. Thus two more North Germanic languages appeared: Faroese (In the Faroe Islands the writing was done in Danish for centuries. The first written records in Faroese appeared only in the 18th c.); Icelandic (9th c. A.D.) The Icelandic Language was THE MOST IMPORTANT OF ALL NORTH GERMANIC LANGUAGES because: 1. The isolation of Iceland caused the preservation of archaic vocabulary and grammatical system. 2. The preservation of archaic vocabulary and grammatical system makes this language very close to Old Norse and helps to reconstruct this ancient common Germanic language. 3. Icelandic has the largest body of written texts (12th – 13th c.), e.g.: – “The Elder Edda” (12th c.) – a collection of heroic songs; – “The Younger Edda” (13th c.) – a text-book forpoets; – Old Icelandic Sagas. West Germanic The West Germanic tribes lived between the Oder and the Elbe and they never left the mainland. The dialectal differentiation of West Germanic was probably quite distinct even at the beginning of our era. On the eve of their great migrations of the 4th and 5th c. the West Germans included several tribes. They were: the Franconians (Low, Middle and High Franconians) – settled the lower basin of the Rhine and with time began to speak the language of the Romanised Celts, apart from Low Franconians who spoke Old Low Franconian that later developed into Dutch; The modern language of the Netherlands, formerly called Dutch, and its variant in Belgium, known as the Flemish dialect, are now treated as a single language, Netherlandish. It is spoken Page 8 / 17 by almost 20 million people; its northern variety, used in the Netherlands has a more standardized literary form. About three hundred years ago the Dutch language was brought to South Africa by colonists from Southern Holland. Their dialects in Africa eventually grew into a separate West Germanic language, Afrikaans. Afrikaans has incorporated elements from the speech of English and German colonists in Africa and from the tongues of the natives. Writing in Afrikaans began as late as the end of the 19th c. Today Afrikaans is the mother-tongue of over four million Afrikaans and coloured people and one of the state languages in the South African Republic (alongside English). the Angles, the Saxons, the Jutes and the Frisians – settled the coastal territories of the Netherlands, Germany, the south of Denmark and the British Isles. The languages they spoke were: – Old English – later developed into English (national language – 16th c.; first written records – 7th c.); – Old Saxon – later developed into a territorial dialect in Germany; - Old Frisian – later developed into Frisian At the later stage of the great migration period - in the 5th c. - a group of West Germanic tribes started out on their invasion of the British Isles. The invaders came from the lowlands near the North Sea: the Angles, part of the Saxons and Frisians, and probably the Jutes. Their dialects in the British Isles developed into the English language. The territory of English was at first confined to what is now known as England proper. From the 13th to the 17th c. it extended to other parts of the British Isles. In the succeeding centuries English spread overseas to other continents. The first English written records have come down from the 7th c., which is the earliest date in the history of writing in the West Germanic subgroup. The Frisians and the Saxons who did not take part in the invasion of Britain stayed on the continent. The area of Frisians, which at one time extended over the entire coast of the North Sea, was reduced under the pressure of other Low German tribes and the influence of their dialects, particularly Low Franconian (later Dutch). Frisian has survived as a local dialect in Friesland (in the Netherlands) and Ostfriesland (the Federal Republic of Germany). It has both an oral and written form, the earliest records dating from the 13th c. In the Early Middle Ages the continental Saxons formed a powerful tribe in the lower basin of the Elbe. They were subjugated by the Franks and after the breakup of the Empire entered its eastern subdivision. Together with High German tribes they took part in the eastward drive and the colonisation of the former Slavonic territories. Old Saxon known in written form from the records of the 9th c. has survived as one of the Low German dialects. Page 9 / 17 High Germans – settled the southern mountainous areas of Germany and spoke Old High German that later developed into two distinctive languages: German: – is known for great dialectal diversity; – first written records – 8th – 9th c.; – 12th c. – literary form of the language appears. Yiddish The High Germans included a number of tribes whose names are known since the early Middle Ages: the Alemanians, the Swabians, the Bavarians, the Thuringians and others. Another offshoot of High German is Yiddish. It grew from the High German dialects which were adopted by numerous Jewish communities scattered over Germany in the 11th and 12th c. These dialects blended with elements of Hebrew and Slavonic and developed into a separate West Germanic language with a spoken and literary form. Yiddish was exported from Germany to many other countries: Russia, Poland, the Baltic States and America. 7. Linguistic features of Germanic Languages. All the Germanic languages of the past and present have common linguistic features: some of these features are shared by other groups in the Indo-European family; others are specifically Germanic. The Germanic group acquired their specific distinctive features after the separation of the ancient Germanic tribes from other Indo- European tribes and their further expansion and disintegration, that is during the period of the PG parent-language. These PG features inherited by the descendant languages, represent the common features of the Germanic group. Other common features developed later, in the course of individual histories of separate Germanic languages, as a result of similar tedencies arising from PG causes. On the other hand, many Germanic languages have been transformed and even lost in later history. Phonetic System. Word stress The peculiar Germanic system of word accentuation is one of the most important distinguishing features of the group; it arose in PG, was fully or partly retained in separate languages and served as one of the major causes for many linguistic changes. It is known that in ancient Indo-European, prior to the separation of Germanic, there existed two ways of word accentuation: musical pitch and force stress. The position of the stress was free and movable, which means that it could fall on any syllable of the word – a root-morpheme, an affix or an ending – and could be shifted both in form-building and word-building. Both these properties of the word accent were changed in Proto-Germanic. Force and expiratory stress became the only type of stress used. In Early Proto-Germanic word stress was Page 10 / 17 still as movable as in ancient Indo-European but in Late Proto-Germanic its position in the word was stabilized. The stress was now fixed on the first syllable, which was usually the root of the word and sometimes the prefix; the other syllables – suffixes and endings – were unstressed. The stress could no longer move either in form-building or word-building. These features of word accent were inherited by the German languages, and despite later alterations are observed today. In Modern English there is a sharp contrast between accented and unaccented syllables due to the force of stress. The main accent commonly falls on the rootmorpheme, and is never shifted in building grammatical forms. The following English words illustrate its fixed position in grammatical forms and derived words: be'come, be'coming, over'come; 'lover, 'loving, be'loved. It would be interesting to compare these native words with words of foreign origin which move the stress in derivation, though never in form-building: exhibit, exhibition. The heavy fixed word stress inherited from Proto-Germanic has played an important role in the development of Germanic languages, and especially in phonetic and morphological changes. Due to the difference in the force of articulation the stressed and unstressed syllables underwent widely different changes: accented syllables were pronounced with great distinctiveness and precision, while unaccented ones became less distinct and were phonetically weakened. Since the stress was fixed on the root, the weakening and loss of sounds mainly affected the suffixes and grammatical endings. Many endings merged with the suffixes, were weakend and dropped. E.g., the reconstructed PG word “fish”, with its descendants in Old Germanic languages: e.x. PG fiskaz – Gt (gothic) fisks – O Icel. fiskr - OE fisc – ME fish Vowel system Throughout history, beginning with PG, vowels displayed a strong tendency to change. They underwent different kinds of alterations: qualitative, quantitative, independent, dependent. Qualitative changes affect the quality of the sound, e.g. [o > a] [p >f]. Quantitative changes make long sounds short or visa versa short sounds long [i : > ı]. Dependent changes are restricted to certain positions or phonetic conditions ( a sound changes under the influence of the neighboring sounds). Independent changes or regular affect a certain sound in all positions. From an early date the treatment of vowels was determined by the nature of word stress. In accented syllables the oppositions between vowels were carefully maintained and new distinctive features were introduced, so that the number of stressed vowels grew. In unaccented positions the original contrasts between vowels were weakened or lost; the distinction of short and long vowels was neutralised so that by the age of writing the long vowels in unstressed syllables had been shortened. As for originally short vowels, they tended to be reduced to a neutral sound, losing their qualitative distinctions and were often Page 11 / 17 dropped in unstressed final syllables (e.x. PG fiskaz – Gt (gothic) fisks – O Icel. fiskr OE fisc – ME fish). Strict differentiation of long and short vowels is commonly regarded as an important characteristic of the Germanic group. Long vowels tended to become closer and to diphthongize. Short vowels often changed into more open sounds. This tendency can be seen in the earliest vowel changes which distinguished the PG vowel system from its PIE source. IE short [o] changed in Germanic into the more open vowel [a] and thus ceased to be distinguished from the original IE [a]; in other words in PG they merged into [o]. The merging of long vowels proceeded in the opposite direction: IE long [a:] was narrowed to [o:] and merged with [o:]. In Germanic Languages the vowels displayed a tendency to positional assimilative changes: the pronunciation of a vowel was modified under the influence of the following or preceding consonants. This process affected two pairs of vowels: e and i, and o and u. The direction of the change may be formulated in the following way: 1. Indo-European e appeared in the root of the Germanic languages as i in certain phonetic conditions, namely before i, j in the next syllable or before the nasal n: L ventus –→ Gt winds,OIcel. vindr (wind) L edit → OHG izit, OE iteþ 2. Indo-European u corresponded to u in the root of Germanic languages, if it was followed by u or nasal+consonant, in other cases Indo-European u appeared in Germanic Languages as o: Lith sunus → OIcel sunr, OE sunu (son) Celt hurnan → OE horn (horn) (In certain phonetic conditions namely before the nasal [n] and before [i] or [j] in the next syllable the short Indo-European vowels [e], [i], [u] remained or became close in the following syllable of the roots in Germanic Languages( i.e. appeared as [i] and [u]): L ventus –→ Gt winds,OIcel. vindr (wind) L edit → OHG izit, OE iteþ Lith sunus → OIcel sunr, OE sunu (son) In the absence of these conditionsthe more open allophones were used: [e] and [o] L edere → OIcel eta, OE etan (eat) Celt hurnan → OE horn (horn)) After the changes in Late PG, the vowel system contained the following sounds: Short vowels: i, e, a, o, u Long vowels: i: e: a: o: u: Page 12 / 17 Сonsonants (Proto-Germanic consonant shift, Grimm's Law, Verner's Law). The specific peculiarities of consonants constitute the most remarkable distinctive feature of the Germanic linguistic group. Comparing with other languages within the IE family reveals regular correspondences between Germanic and non-Germanic consonants. We regularly find [f] in Germanic where other IE languages have [p]: E full R полный; wherever Germanic has [p], cognate words in non-Germanic languages have [b]: E pool R болото. The consonants in Germanic look shifted when compared with nonGermanic languages. The alterations of the consonants took place in PG, and the resulting sounds were inherited by the languages of the Germanic group. The changes of consonants in PG were first fromulated in terms of a phonetic law by Jacob Grimm in the early 19th century and are often called Grimm’s Law. It is also known as the 1st or ProtoGermanic consonant shift. Jacob Grimm divided this shift into 3 parts, which he called acts. They took place at different times. A c t I: IE voiceless plosives are shifted to corresponding voiceless fricatives in Germanic. p > f L pes- Gt fōtus – OIcel. fotr – ME foot t > θ L tres – Gt Þreis- OIcel Þrir – ME three k > x L cor- Gt hairto – OIcel hjarta – ME heart A c t II: IE voiced plosives are shifted to voiceless plosives in Germanic languages. b > p Lith bala – OHG pfuol ME pool d > t L decem – Gt taihun – OIcel tiu- ME ten g > k L iugum – Gt juk – OIcel ok – ME yoke [jouk] иго A c t III: Indo-European voiced aspirated plosives were reflected either as voiced fricatives or as pure voiced plosives. bh > v ( or b) OInd. bhrāta - Gt broÞar- OIcel broðir- ME brother dh > ð ( or d) OIcel rudhira – Gt raūÞs – OIcel rauðr – ME red gh > g L hostis – Gt gasts – OIcel gestr – ME guest Another important series of changes were discovered in 19th century by a Danish scholar Carl Verner. They are known as Verner’s Law. These changes seemed to contradict Grimm’s Law and were regarded as exceptions. According to Verner’s Law all the Early PG voiceless fricatives f, θ, x, and PIE s became voiced between vowels if the preceding vowel was unstressed; in the absence of these conditions they remained voiceless. PIE p > PG f>v pa’ter > Early PG fa’θar/ fa’ðar - > Late PG ‘faðar > OE fæder > ME father PIE k > PG x > g L so’crus- Gt swaihro- German schwager (деверь, шурин) PIE s > PG z ( r ) L au’ris- Gt auso- OIcel eyra ME ear Page 13 / 17 PIE t > PG θ > ð,d OInd sa’tam – Gt hund – OIcel hundrað The causes and mechanisms of the Proto-Germanic consonant shift have been a matter of discussion ever since the shift was discovered. When Jacob Grimm first formulated the law of the shift he ascribed it to the allegedly daring spirit of the Germanic tribes which manifested itself both in their great migrations and in radical linguistic innovations. His theory has long been rejected as naïve and romantic. Some philologists attributed the shift to the physiological peculiarities of the Teutons, namely the shape of their glottis: it differed from that of other Indo-European tribes, and the pronunciation of consonants was modified. Other scholars maintained that the consonant shift was caused by a more energetic articulation of sounds brought about by the specifically Germanic word stress. Another theory suggested that the articulation of consonants in Germanic was, on the contrary, marked by lack of energy and tension. The theory of “linguistic substratum” which was popular with many 20th c. linguists, attributes the Proto-Germanic consonant changes – as well as other Germanic innovations – to the influence of the speech habits of pre-Germanic population in the areas of Germanic settlement. The language of those unknown tribes served as a sort of substratum (‘under-layer’) for the wouldbe Germanic tongues; it intermixed with the language of the Teutons and left certain traces in Proto-Germanic. This hypothesis can be neither confirmed nor disproved, since we possess no information about the language of pre-Indo-European inhabitants of Western Europe. According to recent theories the Proto-Germanic consonant shift could be caused by the internal requirements of the language system: the need for more precise phonemic distinction reliable in all phonetic conditions. According to J. Kurylowicz, before the shift the opposition of voiced and voiceless plosives was neutralized (that is, lost) in some positions, namely before the sound [s]; therefore new distinctive features arouse in place of or in addition to sonority. [p], [t], [k] changed into [f], [q], [x] and began to be contrasted to [b], [d], [g] not only through sonority but also through the manner of articulation as fricatives to plosives. This change led to further changes: since [f], [q], [x] were now opposed to [b], [d], [g] through their fricative character, sonority became irrelevant for phonemic distinction and [b], [d], [g] were devoiced: they changed into [p], [t], [k] respectively. That is how the initial step stimulated further changes and the entire system was shifted. It is essential that throughout the shift the original pattern of the consonant system was preserved: three rows of noise consonants were distinguished, though instead of opposition through sonority consonants were opposed as fricatives to plosives. Another explanation based on the structural approach to language interprets the role of the language system from a different angle. Every subsystem in language tends to preserve a balanced, symmetrical arrangement: if the balance is broken, it will soon be restored by means of new changes. After the replacement of [p], [t], [k] by [f], [q], [x] the positions of the voiceless [p], [t], [k] in the consonant system were left vacant; to fill the vacuums and restore the equilibrium [b], [d], [g] were devoiced into [p], [t], [k]. In their turn the vacant positions of [b], Page 14 / 17 [d], [g] were filled again in the succeeding set of changes, when [bh], [dh], [gh] lost their aspirated character. This theory, showing the shift as a chain of successive steps, fails to account for the initial push. Peculiarities of the grammatical system. The Old Germanic languages had a synthetic grammatical structure, which means that the relationships between the parts of the sentence were shown by the forms of the words rather than by their position or by auxiliary words. In later history all the Germanic languages developed analytical forms and ways of word connection. The grammatical forms were built in the synthetic way: by means of inflections, sound interchanges and suppletion. The suppletive way was inherited from ancient IE, was restricted to a few personal pronouns, adjectives and verbs. L Fr R Gt OIcel OE NE ego je я ik ek ic I Inflections were the principal means of form-building and they corresponded to the inflections used in non-Germanic but most of them were shorter and simpler. The wide use of sound interchanges has always been a characteristic feature of the Germanic group. It was inherited from IE and became very productive in Germanic. OE ME German beran bear gebären bær bore (sg) gebar bæron (pl) boren born geboren bīrÞ bears The bulk of the verbs in PG and in the OG languages fall into two large groups called strong and weak. Jacob Grimm proposed these terms and called the verbs strong because they had preserved the richness of form since the age of the parent language when weak verbs lacked such variety of form. The strong verbs built their principal forms with the help of root vowel interchanges plus grammatical endings. The weak verbs built the tense by inserting a special suffix between the root and the ending. The original structure of a noun in Germanic, as well as in other IE languages, presents itself as follows: a noun consists of 3 elements: 1. the root 2. a stem-building suffix 3. a case inflexion Page 15 / 17 Let us consider each of the three; the meaning of the root is clear: it is the lexical meaning of the noun. The meaning of the case inflexion is also clear: it expresses the relation between the thing denote by the substantive and other things or actions and also the category of number. The meaning of the stem-building suffix is much more difficult to define. From the point of view of the period to which the texts of Old Germanic belong, this suffix no longer has any meaning at all. It would appear that originally stem-building suffixes were a means of classifying the nouns according to their meaning. What the principle of classification was, is hard to tell, there is only one type of noun in Gothic which is characterized by a distinct semantic feature. These are nouns denoting relationship and derived by means of the: 1. stem-forming suffix r e.g. fadar, broÞar, swistar, etc. For all other type it has not proved possible to discover a common feature of meaning. -a-, -o-, -i-, -u- are stem-building suffixes. These stems are called: 2. Vocalic stems. Declension of these nouns – strong declension There are some other types of noun-stems in Old Germanic languages: 3. n-stems. This declension is called weak. 4. root-stems - a peculiar type. These nouns never had a stem-building suffix, so that their stem had always coincided with their root. Later the stem-building suffix lost its own meaning and merged with the case inflexion. As a result the stem of the noun consisted of the root alone. Declension of Adjectives in Old Germanic languages is complicated in a way which finds no parallel in other IE languages. The adjectives could be declined according to the strong and weak declension. Weak declension forms are used when the adjective is preceded by a demonstrative pronoun or the definite article; they are associated with the meaning of definiteness. In all other contexts forms of the strong declension are used. Old Germanic vocabulary. Until recently it was believed that the Germanic languages had a large proportion of words, which have no parallels in other groups of the IE family. Recent research however, has revealed that Germanic has inherited and preserved many IE features in lexics as well as at other levels. The most ancient etymological layer in the Germanic Vocabulary is made up of words (roots) shared by most IE languages. In addition to roots the common IE element includes other components of words; word-building affixes and grammatical inflexions. Words, which occur in Germanic alone and have no parallels outside the group, constitute the specific features of the Germanic languages. They appeared in PG or in later history of Page 16 / 17 separate languages from purely Germanic roots. Semantically, they also belong to basic spheres of life: nature, sea, home, life, etc. Like IE layer the specifically Germanic layer includes not only roots but also affixes and word-building patterns. Here are some examples whose roots have not been found outside the group, and some word-building patterns which arose in Late PG. These are instances of transition from compound words into derived words; they show the development of new suffixes – from root morphemes – at the time when many old derivational stem-suffixes had lost their productivity and ceased to be distinguished of the word structure. The new suffixes made up for the loss of stem-suffixes. In addition to native words the OG languages share some borrowings. The earliest are to be found in most languages of the group. Probably they were made at the time when the Germanic tribes lived closer together as a single speech community that is in late PG. It is known that the name of the metal ironwas borrowed from the Celtic languages in late PG. Cf. Celt. isarno, Gt eisarn, OIcel. sarn, OE isen, iren (The Teutons may have learned the processing of iron from the Celts.) A large number of words must have been borrowed from Latin prior to the migration of West-Germanic tribes to Britain. These words reflect the contacts of the Germanic tribes with Rome and the influence of the Roman civilization on their life; they mostly refer to trade and warfare: L. pondo, Gt. pund, OE pund, NE pound L. prunus, OE plume, NE plum L. strata via, OHG strâza, OE stræt, NE street. Page 17 / 17