Drout's Quick and Easy Old English
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About this ebook
Michael DC Drout has now transformed his classic "King Alfred's Grammar" into a comprehensive guide for learning Old English. Appropriate for students and enthusiasts alike, Drout's Quick and Easy Old English presents the basics of the language in an accessible form. Even the most novice student can learn to read the classics of medieval literature in their original language with this system.
Drout's Quick and Easy Old English covers: The history of Old English; Orthography, covering the unfamiliar characters of Old English writing; Pronouncing Old English; Grammar, from nouns and verbs to pronouns and adjectives; Tricks for translation.
With the help of Bruce Gilchrist and Rachel Kapelle, Drout provides exercises to reinforce the lessons. After years of testing in classrooms and online, these exercises have been thoroughly vetted for accuracy by scholars around the world, and have guided countless students through their first lessons in Old English.
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Drout's Quick and Easy Old English - Michael D.C. Drout
Acknowledgements
For their inspired teaching, my sincere thanks to Peggy Knapp of Carnegie Mellon University, John Miles Foley of the Center for Studies in Oral Tradition at the University of Missouri-Columbia, Martin Camargo of the University of Illinois and Allen J. Frantzen of Loyola University Chicago.
My gratitude also goes out to my colleagues in the English department at Wheaton College: Deyonne Bryant, Claire Buck, Shawn Christian, Beverly Lyon Clark, Sam Coale, Katherine Conway, Susan Dearing, Paula Krebs, Lisa Lebduska, Charlotte Meehan, Dick Pearce, Sheila Shaw, Pam Stafford, Josh Stenger, Sue Standing and Kathleen Vogt. Thanks also to Provosts Susanne Woods, Molly Easo Smith and Linda Eisenmann as well as to Marilyn Todesco, Paula Smith-MacDonald, Libby Bixby and Beth Affanato. Kathryn Powell, Donald Scragg, Steve Harris and the scholars of the International Society of Anglo-Saxonists at the 1999 convention at the University of Notre Dame all made many corrections and useful suggestions. The King Alfred computer program was inspired by a suggestion from David I. Drout.
My student collaborators, David Dudek (who programmed the first version of King Alfred) and Rachel Kapelle (who found and parsed the sentences) not only contributed significantly to the project but also encouraged me to continue to work on it. Additional help came from Laura Kalafarski. Rebecca Epstein has significantly improved the book through her detailed criticism.
Wheaton's Library, Technology and Learning Committee partially funded the creation of the grammar with a generous stipend, and the original development of the King Alfred program was funded by a Gebbie student/faculty research grant. Jenny Lund encouraged me to begin work on the program. Mars faculty/student research stipends have supported the improvement and re-development of King Alfred. I am grateful to Wheaton College for the continued support of this and other projects.
I want to especially thank Rachel Kapelle, Lisa Michaud and Bruce Gilchrist. Rachel selected and parsed many of the sample sentences. Lisa completely re-wrote the King Alfred program. As well as devising major innovations in the structure of the grammar, Bruce has written the appendix on sound changes. He has made significant improvements, fixing explanations, catching errors and expanding discussions. Scott Kleinman completely fixed the on-line version of the book and made many valuable suggestions.
Thanks also to Scott Nokes and Witan Publishing for believing in the value of the grammar.
My wife, Raquel M. D'Oyen, my daughter Rhys and my son Mitchell have generously allowed me the time and given me the inspiration to continue this work.
Finally, all of my students who have suffered through the various versions of King Alfred, King Alfred's Grammar and now Drout's Quick and Easy Old English (learning Anglo-Saxon on the way) in many ways wrote this book through their hard work and honest criticisms. I am grateful for all of their hard work and enthusiasm.
Michael D.C. Drout
Wheaton College and Dedham, Mass.
March 2012
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Table of Contents
Introduction
Chapter 1: A Brief History of Old English
Chapter 2: Old English Orthography
Chapter 3: Old English Pronunciation
Chapter 4: Grammar Concepts: Parts of Speech
Chapter 5: Grammar Concepts: Word Functions
Chapter 6: Grammar Concepts: Word Order and Cases
Chapter 7: Personal Pronouns
Chapter 8: Overview of Verbs
Chapter 9: Irregular Verbs
Chapter 10: Demonstrative and Relative Pronouns
Chapter 11: Strong Adjectives
Chapter 12: Weak Adjectives
Chapter 13: Strong Nouns
Chapter 14: Weak Nouns
Chapter 15: Minor Declension Nouns
Chapter 16: Weak Verbs
Chapter 17: Strong Verbs
Chapter 18: Preterite-Present Verbs
Chapter 19: Translating Tricks
Chapter 20: Conclusion: What Next?
Appendix on Sound Changes
Answers to Exercises
Glossary of Grammar Terms
Glossary of Old English Words
Blank Paradigms
Introduction
Old English, a term which is often used interchangeably with Anglo-Saxon,
is obviously no longer a spoken language. Because there are no living speakers of Old English to talk to, the techniques for teaching and learning Old English are somewhat different than those used for a living language. Although the goal of comprehending the target language remains the same, many of the approaches of conversational language instruction do not seem to work for Old English.
Rather than fluency in conversation, the main goal of any beginning Old English class needs to be acquiring the ability to translate and read the language. When you can translate Old English you will be able to read some of the very best poetry and most interesting prose that world literature has to offer. This grammar book and translation program are designed with the goal of giving a student the ability to translate as quickly as possible.
Translation ability has always been at the heart of Old English study, but the means by which this goal is reached are beginning to change. Old English has traditionally been taught the same ways as have Latin and Greek, but few students seem to be content with a purely analytical approach of memorizing paradigms and approaching the language as a logic puzzle. This resistance is unfortunate, because although Old English does not always unlock the treasures of its word hoard
easily, the treasures therein are precious and the struggle to attain them is in itself a valuable effort.
But as Cnut, the great eleventh-century king, is supposed to have demonstrated, the tide does not stop coming in just because someone wants it to stop. The classical studies approach is clearly not working for all students of Old English.
Enter Drout's Quick and Easy Old English. It is our hope (borne out by a decade of testing in the classroom) that by helping students focus on problem areas and to spend more time learning things that aren't already known instead of repeating already mastered material, the process of learning Old English will be stripped of much of its drudgery. This grammar is structured to present material at the most basic, direct level possible. We have kept explanations as brief and straightforward as we can, and all key terms that are marked in bold are given definitions in the Glossary of Grammar Terms at the back of the book. At the back of the book students will also find a supplementary Appendix on Sound Changes. There is also an Old English Glossary (although this is not a good substitute for An Anglo-Saxon Dictionary by J. R. Clark-Hall) and a few pages of blank paradigm charts that can be printed out and used by students to learn declensions and conjugations more effectively. We hope all of these elements make Drout's Quick and Easy Old English useful to beginning Old English students of all backgrounds, not only to native English speakers, but also to students for whom Modern English is a second or third language.
Students who make a strong effort to master Old English grammar right from the beginning can almost always read Old English (with the help of a dictionary) by the end of the semester. By simplifying the language as much as possible, we hope we have enabled students to be free to pay more attention to the beauty and power of this oldest form of the language we speak today and (to steal King Alfred's words) to learn those things that are most necessary for people to know.
Chapter 1: A Brief History of Old English
When the Anglo-Saxons first came to England from northern Germany in the fifth and sixth centuries, they brought their language with them. It is a Germanic language and has some fundamental similarities to modern German. If Anglo-Saxon had then developed undisturbed for several centuries we might have no more trouble reading an Old English text than we do reading something written by Chaucer at the end of the fourteenth century (students can start reading Chaucer with no special linguistic instruction, although they may need to go slowly and will probably require the help of footnotes for the first few weeks of a course). But political and cultural events changed the Anglo-Saxon language into the language we speak today.
The most important political influence upon the language was the Norman Conquest of 1066, when William the Conqueror, a prince of Normandy (a part of France), conquered England. William made French the language of the aristocracy and the law courts. Anglo-Norman French was an elite language, and the common people did not necessarily learn it as children, but it was the official language of the nation.
Over the next two centuries Anglo-Norman French mixed with Anglo-Saxon, probably because the children of the Norman-French aristocracy were being raised by servants who spoke Anglo-Saxon among themselves. What we call Middle English arose out of this language contact and earlier interactions between Old Norse and Anglo-Saxon. Middle English was less inflected than Anglo-Saxon, using the order of words in a sentence to indicate grammatical relationships, and the language absorbed much French vocabulary. Spoken between 1200 and 1400, Middle English is the language of Geoffrey Chaucer, William Langland, and the anonymous poet who wrote Sir Gawain and the Green Knight.
But as you can see by reading any brief passage from Chaucer, Chaucer's language is not our language. Around the year 1500, a linguistic event called The Great Vowel Shift
occurred. No one really knows why, though there are many speculations, but within a generation or so the pronunciation of Middle English vowels was rearranged. For example, the ee
sound in Chaucer's word sweete
(pronounced to rhyme with eight
) became the ee
sound in Modern English sweet.
Also the i
in April,
which is Chaucer's time was pronounced to rhyme with Modern English peel
became the short i
sound in Modern English April.
Once this vowel shift is complete, we have Early Modern English and, soon after, Modern English. Thus while Chaucer takes some getting used to, students can successfully read the writings of Shakespeare with very little formal instruction in his language. Our language, for all the new words added and changes in manners and style, is essentially the same as Shakespeare's. We could have understood Shakespeare, and he would have understood us, but he would not have understood the Anglo-Saxon writer Ælfric, and neither would Chaucer even though approximately the same amount of time separates Chaucer from Ælfric as separates Shakespeare from us.
Despite the differences between Old English and Modern English, the language retains a fundamental kinship to our own. Students can thus expect to find learning Old English to be somewhat easier than learning a new foreign
language such as Spanish or French. A semester's worth of hard work should be enough to give a student the ability to translate Old English poetry and prose. The key to success in this endeavor is to lay a solid foundation of grammatical understanding. While at first it may seem easy to get the general idea
of a passage, if you take the time to figure out exactly how each word is working in a sentence you will find that the more complicated Old English sentences that we meet later in the semester will be less difficult to translate than they otherwise might be.
It is also important for students to realize that this short work is not a permanent substitute for an expansive, detailed grammar book, such as Mitchell and Robinson's A Guide to Old English. Drout's Quick and Easy Old English skips over exceptions to rules, complications of syntax and some subtleties of Old English grammar. The time in a semester is so short and the number of things worth learning so many that we feel justified in this simplification. Our purpose is to get students translating literature as quickly as humanly possible, thus preparing them for further study in Old English literature and culture.
Chapter 2: Old English Orthography
A few of the letters in Old English texts may be unfamiliar to you.