English English has two patterns for forming the past tense in roots ending in
apical stops: . Although Modern English has very little affixal morphology, its number includes a marker of the
preterite, other than verbs with vowel changes of the
find/found sort, and almost all verbs that end in take as the marker of the preterite, as seen in Type I. Comparing between the verbs of Type I and Type II, those in Type II are all basic vocabulary (This is a claim about Type II verbs and not about basic verbs since there are basic verbs in Type I also). However, no
denominative verbs (those formed from nouns like
to gut, to braid, to hoard, to bed, to court, to head, to hand) are in Type II. There are no verbs of Latin or French origin; all stems like
depict, enact, denote, elude, preclude, convict are Type I. Furthermore, all new forms are inflected as Type I and so all native speakers of English would presumably agree that the preterites of
to sned and
to absquatulate would most likely be
snedded and
absquatulated. That evidence shows that the absence of a "dental preterite" marker on roots ending in apical stops in Type II reflects a more original state of affairs. In the early history of the language, the "dental preterite" marker was in a sense absorbed into the root-final consonant when it was or , and the affix after word-final apical stops then belonged to a later stratum in the evolution of the language. The same suffix was involved in both types but with a total reversal of "strategy." Other exercises of internal reconstruction would point to the conclusion that the original affix of the dental preterites was (V being a vowel of uncertain phonetics). A direct inspection of Old English would certainly reveal several different stem-vowels involved. In modern formations, stems that end in preserve the vowel of the preterite marker. The loss of the stem vowel had taken place already whenever the root ended in an apical stop before the first written evidence.
Latin Latin has many examples of "word families" showing vowel alternations. Some of them are examples of Indo-European
ablaut:
pendō "weigh",
pondus "a weight";
dōnum "gift",
datum "a given",
caedō "cut" perf.
ce-cīd-,
dīcō "speak", participle
dictus, that is, inherited from the proto-language (all unmarked vowels in these examples are short), but some, involving only short vowels, clearly arose within Latin:
faciō "do", participle
factus, but
perficiō, perfectus "complete, accomplish";
amīcus "friend" but
inimīcus "unfriendly, hostile";
legō "gather", but
colligō "bind, tie together", participle
collectus;
emō "take; buy", but
redimō "buy back", participle
redemptus;
locus "place" but
īlicō "on the spot" (< *
stloc-/*instloc-);
capiō "take, seize", participle
captus but
percipiō "lay hold of",
perceptus;
arma "weapon" but
inermis "unarmed";
causa "lawsuit, quarrel" but
incūsō "accuse, blame";
claudō "shut",
inclūdō "shut in";
caedō "fell, cut", but
concīdō "cut to pieces"; and
damnō "find guilty" but
condemnō "sentence" (verb). To simplify, vowels in initial syllables never alternate in this way, but in non-initial syllables short vowels of the simplex forms become -
i- before a single consonant and -
e- before two consonants; the diphthongs -
ae- and -
au- of initial syllables alternate respectively with medial -
ī- and -
ū-. As happened here, reduction in contrast in a vowel system is very commonly associated with position in atonic (unaccented) syllables, but Latin's tonic accent of
reficiō and
refectus is on the same syllable as simplex
faciō, factus, which is true of almost all of the examples given (
cólligō, rédimō, īlicō (initial-syllable accent) are the only exceptions) and indeed for most examples of such alternations in the language. The reduction of contrast points in the vowel system (-
a- and
-o- fall together with -
i- before a single consonant, with -
e- before two consonants; long vowels replace diphthongs) must not have had anything to do with the location of the accent in attested Latin. The accentual system of Latin is well-known, partly from statements by Roman grammarians and partly from agreements among the Romance languages on the location of tonic accent: the tonic accent in Latin fell three syllables before the end of any word with three or more syllables unless the second-last syllable (called the
penult in classical linguistics) was "heavy" (contained a diphthong or a long vowel or was followed by two or more consonants). Then, that syllable had the tonic accent:
perfíciō, perféctus, rédimō, condémnō, inérmis. If there is any connection, between word-accent and vowel-weakening, the accent in question cannot be that of Classical Latin. Since the vowels of initial syllables do not show that weakening (to oversimplify a bit), the obvious inference is that in prehistory, the tonic accent must have been an accent that was always on the first syllable of a word. Such an accentual system is very common in the world's languages (
Czech,
Latvian,
Finnish,
Hungarian, and, with certain complications,
High German and
Old English) but was definitely not the accentual system of
Proto-Indo-European. Therefore, on the basis of internal reconstruction within Latin, a prehistoric sound-law can be discovered that replaced the inherited accentual system with an automatic initial-syllable accent, which itself was replaced by the attested accentual system. As it happens,
Celtic languages also have an automatic word-initial accent that is subject, like the
Germanic languages, to certain exceptions, mainly certain pretonic prefixes. Celtic, Germanic and
Italic languages share some other features as well, and it is tempting to think that the word-initial accent system was an
areal feature, but that would be more speculative than the inference of a prehistoric word-initial accent for Latin specifically. There is a very similar set of givens in English but with very different consequences for internal reconstruction. There is pervasive alternation between long and short vowels (the former now phonetically diphthongs): between and in words like
divide, division; decide, decision; between and in words like
provoke, provocative; pose, positive; between and in words like
pronounce, pronunciation; renounce, renunciation; profound, profundity and many other examples. As in the Latin example, the tonic accent of Modern English is often on the syllable showing the vowel alternation. In Latin, an explicit hypothesis could be framed on the location of word-accent in prehistoric Latin that would account for both the vowel alternations and the attested system of accent. Indeed, such a hypothesis is hard to avoid. By contrast, the alternations in English point to no specific hypothesis but only a general suspicion that word accent must be the explanation, and that the accent in question must have been different from that of Modern English. Where the accent used to be and what the rules, if any, are for its relocation in Modern English cannot be recovered by internal reconstruction. In fact, even the givens are uncertain: it is not possible to tell even whether tonic syllables were lengthened or atonic syllables were shortened (actually, both were involved). Part of the problem is that English has alternations between diphthongs and monophthongs (between Middle English long and short vowels, respectively) from at least six different sources, the oldest (such as in
write, written) dating back to Proto-Indo-European. However, even if it were possible to sort out the corpus of affected words, sound changes after the relocation of tonic accent have eliminated the necessary conditions for framing accurate sound laws. It is actually possible to reconstruct the history of the English vowel system with great accuracy but not by internal reconstruction. In short, during the atonic shortening, the tonic accent was two syllables after the affected vowel and was later retracted to its current position. However, words like
division and
vicious (compare
vice) have lost a syllable in the first place, which would be an insuperable obstacle to a correct analysis. == Notes ==