Old English Noun Morphology: A Diachronic Study |
Contents
INFLECTIONAL RULES OF OLD ENGLISH | 47 |
OLD ENGLISH PHONOLOGY AND MORPHOLOGY | 85 |
AFFIX MODIFICATION IN OLD ENGLISH | 155 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
accusative singular adjectives allophones alternation Apocope back vowels base forms Chapter Cons High consonant Cont dæg dative dative singular deleted derived Devoicing dialects diphthongs discussed distinctions disyllabic environment epenthesis example feminine nouns final fricatives front vowels geminate genitive genitive singular grammar of OE grammatical gender Grammatical Transparency heafod heavy bases i-stem nouns inflectional endings inflectional rule j-Vocalization Kiparsky language Lass and Anderson lexical linguistic locative loss markedness masculine and neuter medial Moore morphological nasal natural class Neut nominative singular nominative/accusative plural o-stems Obl Gov obstruents Old English opaque orthographic palatal paradigms PGmc phonetic phonological innovations phonological rules Plur proportional equation regular reordering restructured segments simplification sound change specified Spirantization stem strong nouns surface Syllabicity Assignment Syncope syntactic texts tion tungol Type Umlaut underlying forms unstressed velar verbs Verner's Law Vocalization voiceless Voicing Assimilation Vowel Reduction weak nouns werod