Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Conventions, symbols and abbreviations
- Introduction and caveats: the notion ‘Old English’
- Part I Historical prelude
- Part II Old English Phonology
- Part III Morphophonemic intermezzo
- 5 Ablaut, the laryngeals and the IE root
- Part IV Morphology, lexis and syntax
- Part V Historical postlude
- Glossary
- References
- Index of names
- Subject index
- Index of Old English words and affixes
5 - Ablaut, the laryngeals and the IE root
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Conventions, symbols and abbreviations
- Introduction and caveats: the notion ‘Old English’
- Part I Historical prelude
- Part II Old English Phonology
- Part III Morphophonemic intermezzo
- 5 Ablaut, the laryngeals and the IE root
- Part IV Morphology, lexis and syntax
- Part V Historical postlude
- Glossary
- References
- Index of names
- Subject index
- Index of Old English words and affixes
Summary
The basic alternations
This chapter is a kind of bridge: its subject is phonology and morphology intertwined, with segmental and suprasegmental connections. It also introduces some of the more complicated aspects of IE historical linguistics; some knowledge of these areas is needed for understanding what would otherwise be highly puzzling features of morpheme-and word-shape in IE languages, including Old English.
As an introduction, consider the following IE cognates:
(5.1) L teg-ō, Gr tég-ō, ‘I cover’, Gr (s)tég-os ‘roof’, OCS o-steg-nąti ‘cover’, Olr teg ‘house’, Lith stóg-as, OPr stog-is ‘roof’, L tog-a ‘toga’ (a garment as ‘covering’), OIc þak ‘roof, thatch, bed-cover’, OHG dah ‘roof’, OE þæc ‘roof, thatch’, L tēc-tum ‘covered’ (pp of teg-ō), tēg-ula ‘tile’.
(On the forms in initial /s-/ see §5.6.)
These obviously contain ‘the same’ IE root, with a basic sense like ‘cover’; and the consonantal ‘skeleton’ easily reconstructs as */tVg-/. This gives L, Lith, Olr /tVg-/, and by Grimm's Law (§2.3) Gmc */θVk-/, which by regular changes gives all the Germanic shapes listed.
So much then for the consonants. But it seems impossible to reconstruct a unique ancestral vowel. IE */e/ would account for teg-ō, o-steg-nąti, teg; but tog-a, stóg-as, þak, dah, þæc require */o/, and tēg-ula, tēc-tum require */e:/. If no single IE vowel could give all these reflexes, what is the shape of the ancestral root? Or is this the right question to ask?
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- Old EnglishA Historical Linguistic Companion, pp. 105 - 120Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1994