_Third Cla.s.s._
-- 366. Here an _o_ before _w_, in the present, becomes _e_ before _w_ in the praeterite; as
_Present._ _Praeterite._ Blow. Blew.
Crow. Crew.
Throw. Threw.
Know. Knew.
Grow. Grew.
_Fourth Cla.s.s._
-- 367. Contains the single word _let_, where a short _e_ in the {309} present remains unchanged in the praeterite. In the Anglo-Saxon the present form was _Ic laete_, the praeterite _Ic let_.
_Fifth Cla.s.s._
-- 368. Contains the single word _beat_, where a long _e_ remains unchanged.
In Anglo-Saxon the forms were _Ic beate_, _Ic beot_.
_Sixth Cla.s.s._
-- 369. Present _come_, praeterite _came_, participle _come_. In Anglo-Saxon, _c.u.me_, _com_, _c.u.men_.
_Seventh Cla.s.s._
-- 370. In this cla.s.s we have the sounds of the _ee_, in _feet_, and of the _a_ in _fate_ (spelt _ea_ or _a_), changed into _o_ or _oo_. As several words in this cla.s.s have a second form in _a_, the praeterite in _o_ or _oo_ will be called the primary, the praeterite in _a_ the secondary form.
_Present._ _Primary Praeterite._ _Secondary Praeterite._
Heave [48]Hove -- Cleave Clove [48]Clave.
Weave Wove -- Freeze Froze -- Steal Stole [48]Stale.
Speak Spoke Spake.
Swear Swore Sware.
Bear Bore Bare.
Tear Tore [48]Tare.
Shear [48]Sh.o.r.e -- Wear Wore [48]Ware.
Break Broke Brake.
Shake Shook -- Take Took -- Forsake Forsook -- Stand Stood -- -- Quoth -- Get Got [48]Gat.
The praeterite of _stand_ was originally long. This we collect {310} from the spelling, and from the Anglo-Saxon form _stod_. The process that ejects the _nd_ is the same process that, in Greek, converts [Greek: odont-os]
into [Greek: odous].
All the words with secondary forms will appear again in the eighth cla.s.s.
_Eighth Cla.s.s._
-- 371. In this cla.s.s the sound of the _ee_ in _feet_, and the _a_ in _fate_ (spelt _ea_), is changed into a. Several words of this cla.s.s have secondary forms. Further details may be seen in the remarks that come after the following list of verbs.
_Present._ _Primary Praeterite._ _Secondary Praeterite._
Speak Spake Spoke.
Break Brake Broke.
Cleave [49]Clave Clove.
Steal [49]Stale Stole.
Eat Ate -- Seethe -- [49]Sod.
Tread [49]Trad Trod.
Bear Bare Bore.
Tear Tare Tore.
Swear Sware Swore.
Wear [49]Ware Wore.
Bid Bade Bid.
Sit Sate -- Give Gave -- Lie Lay -- Get [49]Gat Got.
Here observe,--1. That in _speak_, _cleave_, _steal_, the _ea_ has the same power with the _ee_ in _freeze_ and _seethe_; so that it may be dealt with as the long (or independent) sound of the _i_ in _bid_, _sit_, _give_.
2. That the same view may be taken of the _ea_ in _break_, although the word by some persons is p.r.o.nounced _brake_. _Gabrika_, _gabrak_, Moeso-Gothic; _briku_, _brak_, Old Saxon; _brece_, _brac_, Anglo-Saxon.
Also of _bear_, _tear_, _swear_, _wear_. In the provincial dialects these words are even now p.r.o.nounced _beer_, _teer_, _sweer_. The forms in the allied languages are, in {311} respect to these last-mentioned words, less confirmatory; Moeso-Gothic, _svara_, _baira_; Old High German, _sverju_, _piru_.
3. That the _ea_ in _tread_ was originally long; Anglo-Saxon, _tredan_, _trede_, _tr["ae]d_, _treden_.
4. _Lie._--Here the sound is diphthongal, having grown out of the Anglo-Saxon forms _licgan_, _l["ae]g_, _legen_.
5. _Sat._--The original praeterite was long. This we collect from the spelling _sate_, and from the Anglo-Saxon _s["ae]t_.
_Ninth Cla.s.s._
-- 372. _A_, as in _fate_, is changed either into the _o_ in _note_, or the _oo_ in _book_. Here it should be noticed that, unlike _break_ and _swear_, &c., there is no tendency to sound the _a_ of the present as _ee_, neither is there, as was the case with _clove_ and _spoke_, any tendency to secondary forms in a. A partial reason for this lies in the original nature of the vowel. The original vowel in _speak_ was e. If this was the _e ferme_ of the French, it was a sound from which the _a_ in _fate_ and the _ee_ in _feet_ might equally have been evolved. The vowel sound of the verbs of the present cla.s.s was that of _a_ for the present and that of _o_ for the praeterite forms; as _wace_, _woc_, _grafe_, _grof_. Now of these two sounds it may be said that the _a_ has no tendency to become the _ee_ in _feet_, and that the _o_ has no tendency to become the _a_ in _fate_.
The sounds that are evolved from the accentuated _o_, are the _o_ in _note_ and the _oo_ in _book_.
_Present._ _Praeterite._
Awake Awoke.
Wake Woke.
Lade [50]Lode.
Grave [50]Grove.
Take Took.
Shake Shook.
Forsake Forsook.
Shape [50]Shope.
_Tenth Cla.s.s._
-- 373. Containing the single word _strike_, _struck_, _stricken_. It is only in the Middle High German, the Middle Dutch, the New High German, the Modern Dutch, and the English, that {312} this word is found in its praeterite forms. These are, in Middle High German, _streich_; New High German, _strich_; Middle Dutch, _strec_; Modern Dutch, _strik_. Originally it must have been referable to the ninth cla.s.s.
_Eleventh Cla.s.s._
-- 374. In this cla.s.s we first find the secondary forms accounted for by the difference of form between the singular and plural numbers. The change is from the _i_ in _bite_ to the _o_ in _note_, and the _i_ in _pit_.
Sometimes it is from the _i_ in _bit_ to the _a_ in _bat_. The Anglo-Saxon conjugation (A) may be compared with the present English (B).