Содержание
- 2. General characteristics а synthetic language; grammatical means: suffixation (grammatical endings, prefixes); sound interchange in the root;
- 3. Parts of speech in OE the noun, the adjective, the numeral, the pronoun, the verb, the
- 4. Grammatical categories Nominal (the noun, the adjective, the pronoun and the numeral) Verbal Grammatical categories served
- 5. OE Noun: Number; Gender; Case Number. Number was expressed formally with all nouns. The typical plural
- 6. Gender: masculine, feminine, neuter Sometimes a suffix could refer a noun to a certain gender: -þu
- 7. One word could have different meanings with different genders: se ar (masc.) - a messenger. seo
- 8. Case Nominative case served as the subject, the predicate or the address. Genetive case expressed the
- 9. Declensions in OE 1) The vowel or ‘strong’ declension, which comprised four principal paradigms - the
- 10. 2) The consonant or “weak” declension (n - stems). 3) The declension of root-stem nouns. The
- 12. the Numeral: number quantity Cardinal number is a numeral expressing the number as a quantity. They
- 13. Numerals 13-19 were formed by adding the suffix – tine/tiene to corresponding numerals among the first
- 14. Ordinal number is a numeral expressing the order in account The first two ordinal numerals are
- 15. Adjective - grammatical categories: case, number, gender, the category of degrees of comparison the category of
- 16. Adjectives agreed with nouns in number, gender and case. Like nouns, adjectives had three genders and
- 17. The category of definiteness/indefiniteness: any indefinite adjective referred to new, previously unknown nouns, any definite one
- 18. Like today, in OE there existed typical endings of the adjective: -iʒ = ig; (e.g. halig
- 19. Declension of Adjectives: weak and strong declension The type of declension of the adjective depended on
- 20. Sets of endings for the strong declension mainly coincide with the endings of a-stems of the
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