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2.5.10. Assimilation, Metathesis, Doubling of Consonants, Loss of Consonants

(1) Due to assimilation before n, m the cluster fn often becomes mn,

e.g. fn >mn stefn > stemn (voice); fm>mm wīfman > wimman

(2) The consonant d becomes voiceless t when followed or preceded by a voiceless consonant: d > t bindst >bintst

Another phonetic process of the OE period is metathesis, a phonetic change, when two sounds exchange their places. Most frequently, it affects the consonant r and occasionally some other sounds:

OE þridda > þirda (third); āscian > āxian (ask)

Doubling of consonants is interrelated with palatal mutation. The sound i or j after raising a vowel was lost and caused doubling of consonants (in spelling) or lengthening (in pronunciation): tǣlian> tellan (tell), sǣtian > settan (set)

Loss of consonants is connected with lengthening of vowels: OHG fimf (G.fünf) – OE fīf (five), OHG uns – OE ūs, OE sæʒde > sǣde.

2.6. Old English Morphology

Like Russian Old English was a synthetic or inflected type with a developed system of parts of speech: the noun, the adjective, the numeral (nominal parts of speech or nomina), the verb, the adverb, the preposition, the conjunction and the interjection.

2.6.1. Old English Noun: General Characteristics

OE nouns possessed the categories of number, case and gender. There were two numbers (sg and pl), four cases (nominative, genitive, dative and accusative; (in most declensions the latter coincided with the nominative) and three genders (masculine, feminine and neuter).

OE gender was a lexical-grammatical category. Sometimes a derivational suffix referred a noun to a certain gender, e.g. abstract nouns with the suffix -þu were feminine: OE lenʒþu (length):

Nomina agentis with the suffix –ere were masculine: OE fiscere (fisher); nomina agentis with the suffix –estre were feminine: bæcestre (a woman baker).

Some nouns denoting human beings corresponded to sex division into males and females, e.g. fæder (father), man (man), sunu (son) were masculine; dohtor (daughter), mōdor (mother) (were feminine); some nouns contradicted sex division: wīf (woman) was neuter; wīfman was masculine.

The division into genders was in a certain way connected with the division into stems, though there was no direct correspondence between them.

According to the stem-building suffix, OE nouns were divided into several groups.

In OE, there was only one stem-building suffix –r denoting relationship. Other stem-building suffixes either fused with the endings or were lost altogether. Thus, the division of OE nouns according to stems had only a historical significance.

The majority of OE nouns belonged to the a-stems, ō-stems and n-stems.

Note. With the change of IE o >GC a and IE ā > Gc ō IE o-stem became Gc a-stem and IE ā-stem became Gc ō-stem and they are treated as such by many authors.

It has become traditional to call the declensions of stems ending in a vowel «strong», of n-stem – «weak» and to designate all other declensions as minor.