Grammatical Treatise On the Language of William Langland Preceded By a ...

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Grammatical Treatise On the Language of William Langland Preceded By a ...
Émil Bernard
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3. sg. makep IV, 25; Uggep III, 175; angrep V, 117 ; gojb V, 314; lith I, 124. The termination in the C Text is mostly ith {yp) for this Person: shemih I, 182; telUth n, 126; r(myi> I, 186.
A syncope of the inflectional e usually takes place after a final vowel in the second and third Persons of the Present Indicative. Further contractions are found in the 3'^ Person, when the Stem ends in t (or d, which under this influence becomes t): besides the syncope of the in- flectional e, the final ^ c
...hanges into t and is thus added to the Stem; a few examples occur, where even this i is omitted and the 3'^ Person shows nothing but the Stem of the Verb: ritt (for ridep) IV, 13; rest (for rested) pr. 171; let (for betel)) IV, 69ifynt (for findei>) IV, 131.
G — nt (for ridei>) I, 1^6; rat (for redep) IV, 409.
The termination of the Plural, which in Anglo-Saxon was ap, has first been changed into ep, and at a time of still greater confiision in the Language, when one no longer knew, how to discern the different terminations, taken over from the Anglo-Saxon, has been replaced by the original Inflection of the Subjunctive Mood — ow, softened to — en.


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