Old English nouns are grouped by
grammatical gender, and
inflect based on
case and
number.
Gender Old English retains all three genders of
Proto-Indo-European: masculine, feminine, and neuter. Each noun belongs to one of the three genders, while
adjectives and
determiners take different forms depending on the gender of the noun they describe. The word for "the" or "that" is
sē with a masculine noun,
sēo with a feminine noun, and
þæt (which sounds like “that”) with a neuter noun. Adjectives change endings: for instance, since
hring ("ring") is masculine and
cuppe ("cup") is feminine, a golden ring is
gylden hring, while a golden cup is
gyldenu cuppe. In Old English the words for "he" (
hē) and "she" (
hēo) also mean "it".
Hē refers back to masculine nouns,
hēo to feminine nouns, reserving the neuter pronoun
hit for grammatically neuter nouns. That means even inanimate objects are frequently called "he" or "she". See the following sentence, with the masculine noun
snāw: Compare this parallel sentence, where the neuter noun
fȳr (OE equivalent of NE
fire) is referred to with
hit (OE equivalent of neuter singular nominative NE
it): Only a few nouns referring to people have a grammatical gender that does not match their natural gender, as in the neuter word
mæġden ("girl"). In such cases,
adjectives and
determiners follow grammatical gender, but
pronouns follow natural gender:
Þæt mæġden sēo þǣr stent, canst þū hīe? ("The [neuter] girl who [feminine] is standing there, do you know her?"). When two nouns have different genders,
adjectives and
determiners that refer to them together are inflected neuter:
Hlīsa and spēd bēoþ twieċġu ("Fame [masculine] and success [feminine] are double-edged [neuter plural]").
Gender assignment In Old English (and
Indo-European languages generally), each noun's gender derives from
morphophonology rather than directly from
semantics. In other words, the gender of a noun derives as much or more from its structural form than any properties of the
referent. The gender of a given Old English noun is partly predictable, based on a combination of semantic and historical morphophonological grounds. What follows are some general principles in assigning noun gender in Old English. In general, a thing that has biological sex will have that same gender; masculine
fæder ("father") and feminine
mōdor ("mother"), masculine
cyning ("king") and feminine
cwēn ("queen"), masculine
munuc ("monk") and feminine
nunne ("nun"), etc. The three major exceptions are neuter
wīf ("woman", "wife") and
mæġden ("girl"), and masculine
wīfmann ("woman"). Animal names that refer only to males are masculine (e.g.
hana "rooster",
henġest "stallion",
eofor "boar",
fearr "bull",
ramm "ram", and
bucc "buck"), and animal names that refer only to females are feminine (e.g.
henn "hen",
mīere "mare",
sugu "sow",
cū "cow",
eowu "ewe", and
dā "doe"). The only exception is
drān ("drone"), which is feminine even though it refers to
male bees.
General names for animals (of unspecified sex) could be of any gender: for example,
ūr ("aurochs") is masculine,
fifalde ("butterfly") is feminine, and
swīn ("pig") is neuter. If a noun could refer to both males
and females, it was usually masculine. Hence
frēond ("friend") and
fēond ("enemy") were masculine, along with many other examples such as
lufiend ("lover"),
bæcere ("baker"),
hālga ("saint"),
sċop ("poet"),
cuma ("guest"),
mǣġ ("relative"),
cristen ("Christian"),
hǣðen ("heathen"),
āngenġa ("loner"),
selfǣta ("cannibal"),
hlēapere ("dancer"), and
sangere ("singer"). The main exceptions are the two words for "child",
ċild and
bearn, which are both neuter. It is not easy to predict the gender of a noun that refers to a thing without biological sex, such as neuter
seax ("knife"), feminine
gafol ("fork"), and masculine
cucler ("spoon"). The gender of nouns with inanimate referents is usually determined by historical morphophonological principles: • Nouns ending in
-a are almost all masculine. The exceptions are a small number of learned borrowings from Latin, such as
Italia ("Italy") and
discipula ("[female] disciple"). • Compound words always take the gender of the last part of the compound. That is why
wīfmann ("woman") is masculine, even though it means "woman": it is a compound of
wīf ("woman") plus the masculine noun
mann ("person"). • Similarly, if a noun ends in a suffix, the suffix determines its gender. Nouns ending in the suffixes
-oþ,
-dōm,
-end,
-els,
-uc,
-ling,
-ere,
-hād, and
-sċipe are all masculine, nouns ending in
-ung,
-þu,
-nes,
-estre,
-rǣden, and
-wist are all feminine, and nouns ending in
-lāc,
-et,
-ærn, and
-ċen are all neuter.
Mæġden ("girl") is neuter because it ends in the neuter
diminutive suffix -en. • Letters of the alphabet are all masculine. • Metals are all neuter. • Adjectives used as nouns, such as colors, are neuter unless they refer to people. When they
do refer to people, they are masculine by default unless the person is known to be a female, in which case they duly follow the feminine inflections:
fremde ("stranger"),
fremdu ("[female] stranger");
dēadlīċ ("mortal"),
dēadlīcu ("[female] mortal"). • Verbs are neuter when used as nouns. Since gender is noun-specific and ultimately a feature of
morphophonology rather than
semantics (word-meaning), it goes without saying that any "thing" (
referent) might be referred to as a different name (
noun) of a different gender: a "mountain" could be denoted by the masculine
beorg or feminine
dūn, a "star" could be denoted by masculine
steorra or neuter
tungol, a "window" could be denoted by neuter
ēagþȳrel or feminine
ēagduru, a "tree" could be denoted by neuter
trēo ("tree") or masculine
bēam, a "shield wall" denoted by masculine
sċieldweall or feminine
sċieldburg.
Feminizing suffixes Old English has two nouns for many types of people: a general term which can refer to both males and females, like Modern English "waiter", and a separate term which refers only to females, like Modern English "waitress". Several different suffixes are used to specify females: •
-en is added to miscellaneous words such as
god ("god") →
gyden ("goddess"),
ielf ("elf") →
ielfen ("female elf"),
þeġn ("servant") →
þiġnen ("female servant"),
þēow ("slave") →
þiewen ("female slave"), and
nēahġebūr ("neighbor") →
nēahġebȳren ("female neighbor"). •
-estre is the female equivalent of
-ere and
-end, both meaning "-er". It is used on many nouns such as
sangere ("singer") →
sangestre ("female singer"),
lufiend ("lover") →
lufestre ("female lover"),
bæcere ("baker") →
bæcestre,
tæppere ("bartender") →
tæppestre, and
forspennend ("pimp") →
forspennestre. •
-e is the female equivalent of
-a, which was sometimes a regular noun ending with no meaning and sometimes yet another suffix meaning "-er". Examples include
wyrhta ("worker") →
wyrhte and
foregenġa ("predecessor") →
foregenġe. Sometimes the female equivalent is a totally separate word, as in
lārēow ("teacher") ~
lǣrestre ("female teacher", as if the general term were
*lǣrere),
lǣċe ("doctor") ~
lācnestre ("female doctor", as if the general term were
*lācnere), and
hlāford ("master", literally "bread guardian") ~
hlǣfdiġe ("mistress", literally "bread kneader").
Case As in several other old
Germanic languages, Old English declensions include five
cases:
nominative,
accusative,
dative,
genitive, and
instrumental. •
Nominative: the subject of a sentence, which carries out the action.
Hē lufode hīe ("he loved her"),
þæt mæġden rann ("the girl ran"). Words on the other side of "to be" also take this case: in the phrase
wyrd is eall ("destiny is all"), both "destiny" and "all" are nominative. •
Accusative: the
direct object, that which is acted upon.
Hē lufode hīe ("he loved her"),
sē ridda ācwealde þone dracan ("the knight slew the dragon"). •
Genitive: the possessor of something.
Ġesāwe þū þæs hundes bān? ("Have you seen the dog's bone?"). The genitive in Old English corresponds to 's in present-day English and to "of" in present-day English. Hence, "The fall of Rome" was
Rōme hryre, literally "Rome's fall", and "the god of thunder" was
þunres god, literally "thunder's god". Old English has the preposition "of" but the genitive was the main way of indicating possession. The genitive case could be used
partitively, to signify that something was composed of something else: "a group of people" was
manna hēap (literally "people's group"), "three of us" was
ūre þrī ("our three"), and "a cup of water" was
wætres cuppe ("water's cup"). •
Dative: the
indirect object.
Iċ sealde hire þone beall ("I gave her the ball"). •
Instrumental: something that is being used.
Hwæl mē meahte mid āne sleġe besenċan oþþe ofslēan ("A whale could sink or kill me with one blow"). This case can be used without prepositions when the meaning is clear, as in
ōðre naman, which means "[by] another name":
Ūhtred sē Godlēasa æt Bebban byrġ, ōðre naman sē Deneslaga ("Uhtred the Godless of Bebbanburg, also known as the Daneslayer"). During the Old English period, the instrumental was falling out of use, having mostly merged with the dative. It was distinguished from the dative only in the masculine and neuter singular of strong adjectives and
demonstratives, and even then the dative was often used instead.
Noun classes Not all nouns take the same endings to
inflect for
number and
case. Instead, each noun belongs to one of eight different classes, and each class has a different set of endings (sometimes several, depending on subtype). In
Proto-Germanic, one could tell which class a noun was by its ending in the nominative singular. But by the Old English period, most of these endings had disappeared or merged with other endings, so this was no longer possible.
a-stems A-stem nouns are by far the largest class, totaling 60% of all nouns. Some are masculine, some are neuter. They are called a-stems because in Proto-Germanic times, they ended in
-az (if masculine) or
-ą (if neuter). However, in Old English, both these endings have vanished, and masculines only differ from neuters in the nominative/accusative plural. Masculine a-stems are almost all inflected the same, as in
hund ("dog") below. The neuter a-stems, however, are split in two: some of them end in
-u in the nominative/accusative plural, while others have no ending there at all. This was caused by a sound change called
high vowel apocope, which occurred in the prehistory of Old English.
Short -i and
-u disappeared at the ends of words after a
heavy syllable—that is, a syllable containing a
long vowel or
long diphthong or ending in two or more consonants—and after two light syllables. Nouns which kept short -i/-u are called light, while nouns which lost them are called heavy. The a-stems come in three separate declensions: one for masculine nouns, one for "heavy" neuter nouns, and one for "light" neuter nouns. They are exemplified by
hund ("dog"),
sċip ("boat"), and
hūs ("house"):
ō-stems The ō-stems are by far the largest class after a-stems. They include the vast majority of feminine nouns, and zero nouns with
Null morphemes of any other gender. They are called ō-stems because they ended in
-ō in Proto-Germanic, but in Old English that ending has changed to
-u or vanished. In the nominative singular, "light" ō-stems end in
-u while "heavy" ō-stems have no ending, just like neuter a-stems in the nominative/accusative plural.
n-stems N-stems can be any gender, though there are only a few neuters:
ēage ("eye"),
ēare ("ear"),
wange ("cheek"), and compounds ending in them, such as
þunwange ("temple [of the head]"). N-stems are also called "weak nouns", because they are "weakly" inflected; i.e., most of their inflections have the same ending,
-an. All other nouns are called "strong nouns". Masculine and feminine n-stems are inflected the same except in the nominative singular, where masculines end in
-a, feminines in
-e: The few neuter n-stems are declined the same as feminines, except they also have
-e in the accusative singular:
i-stems The i-stems are so called because they ended in
-iz in Proto-Germanic, but in Old English that ending has either become
-e (in light i-stems) or vanished (in heavy i-stems). These nouns come in every gender, though neuter i-stems are rare. By the earliest Old English prose, this class has already largely merged with other classes: masculine and neuter i-stems have taken on the same declension as a-stems, and feminine i-stems have
almost the same declension as ō-stems. So, they are really only called i-stems because of their history, not because of how they inflect. Their only distinct inflection survives in the accusative singular of feminine heavy i-stems, which fluctuates between
-e (the ō-stem ending) and no ending (the inherited ending): The exceptions are a few nouns that
only come in the plural, namely
lēode ("people") and various names of nationalities, such as
Engle ("the English") and
Dene ("the Danes"). These nouns kept the nominative/accusative plural
-e that they inherited through regular sound change.
u-stems The
u-stems are all masculine or feminine. They are all declined the same way, regardless of gender: There are few pure u-stem nouns, but some are very common:
duru ("door"),
medu ("mead"),
wudu ("wood"). Most historical u-stems have been transferred over to the a-stems. Some nouns follow the a-stem inflection overall, but have a few leftover u-stem forms in their inflection. These forms may exist alongside regular a-stem forms: •
feld: dative singular
felda •
ford: dative singular
forda •
winter: dative singular
wintra •
æppel: nominative/accusative plural
æppla Root nouns Root nouns are a small class of nouns which, in
Proto-Germanic, had ended in a consonant without any intervening vowel. These nouns undergo
i-umlaut in the dative singular and the nominative/accusative plural. This is the source of nouns in Modern English which form their plural by changing a vowel, as in man ~ men, foot ~ feet, tooth ~ teeth, mouse ~ mice, goose ~ geese, and louse ~ lice. In Old English, there were many more such words, including
bōc ("book"),
cū ("cow"),
gāt ("goat"),
āc ("oak"),
hnutu ("nut"),
burg ("city"), and
sulh ("plow"). All root nouns are either masculine or feminine. Masculine root nouns are all heavy, but among feminines there is a contrast between light nouns and heavy nouns: light nouns end in
-e where they have umlaut of the root vowel, while heavy nouns have no ending. The typical declension is this:
nd-stems Nd-stems are nouns formed with the suffix
-end, which creates
agent nouns from verbs:
āgan ("to own") →
āgend ("owner"). All are masculine. Single-syllable nd-stems are only possible when the stem ends in a vowel, which is rare; hence, only three are attested:
frēond ("friend") ←
frēoġan ("to love"),
fēond ("enemy") ←
fēoġan ("to hate"), and
tēond ("accuser") ←
tēon ("to accuse"). They are declined just like masculine root nouns: The multi-syllable nd-stems are declined very differently. Their stem vowel never undergoes
i-umlaut, and in fact, they are inflected just like a-stems in the singular. Moreover, their plural forms are truly unique: the genitive plural always ends in
-ra, which is normally used for adjectives, and the nominative/accusative plural varies between no ending, the adjective ending
-e, and the a-stem ending
-as. The adjectival endings are a relic of the nd-stems' origin as
present participles.
r-stems The
r-stems comprise only five nouns:
fæder,
mōdor,
brōþor,
sweostor, and
dohtor.
Brōþor,
mōdor, and
dohtor are all inflected the same, with i-umlaut in the dative singular.
Sweostor is inflected the same except without i-umlaut.
Fæder is indeclinable in the singular like
sweostor, but has taken its nominative/accusative plural from the a-stems. In addition,
brōþor and
sweostor often take the prefix
ġe- in the plural, while the rest never do.
z-stems Z-stems are the name given to four neuter nouns which inflect like light neuter a-stems, except the plural endings begin with
-r-. These nouns are
ċild ("child"),
ǣġ ("egg"),
lamb ("lamb"), and
ċealf ("calf").
Irregularities The above only mentions the most common ways each noun class is inflected. There are many variations even within classes, some of which include: •
High vowel apocope (loss of
short -i and
-u at the end of a word) is not entirely consistent. At first, these sounds were lost after a heavy syllable or two light syllables. But then, at some point before the written period, speakers started re-adding
-u to the plurals of some neuter nouns where it had originally vanished. These nouns have two competing plurals, one with
-u and one without it. So, "dreams" is either
swefn or
swefnu, "sails" is either
seġl or
seġlu, and "waters" is either
wæter or
wætru, among many other examples. Note that this mainly happened to a very specific set of nouns: those whose inflectional endings are preceded by a consonant plus /n/, /l/, or /r/. • Some nouns have
-u after a heavy syllable because, when high vowel apocope occurred, they had an intervening light syllable which later disappeared. Examples include nouns with the suffix
-þu such as
strengðu ("strength") and
iermðu ("poverty"), z-stem plurals such as
ǣġru ("eggs") and
ċealfru ("calves"), and the a-stem plurals
hēafdu ("heads") and
dēoflu ("demons"). Also the plurals of all neuter a-stems that end in
-e:
wīte ("punishment"), pl.
wītu;
ǣrende ("message"), pl.
ǣrendu. • Some ō-stems unexpectedly end in
-u in the singular, such as
þīestru ("darkness"),
hǣtu ("heat"),
meniġu ("crowd"),
ieldu ("age"), and
bieldu ("bravery"). These nouns once belonged to a separate class called the īn-stems, which all ended in
-ī. Then they merged with the ō-stems when this ending was replaced with
-u—well after high vowel apocope had gone to completion, so the
-u remained. • Many nouns which end with an unstressed vowel plus a single consonant
lose the unstressed vowel when they take inflectional endings:
gristel ("cartilage"),
gristles ("of cartilage"). However, it is impossible to predict which nouns this happens to without knowing the history of the word. For example,
Dryhten ("the Lord") loses its unstressed
-e- when inflected, but
nīeten ("animal") does not;
ēðel ("homeland") does, but
crypel ("cripple") does not. • If an a-stem ends in one consonant and its stem vowel is short /æ/, it becomes /ɑ/ in the plural. "Day" is
dæġ but "days" is
dagas, "bath" is
bæþ but "baths" is
baðu. Other examples include
fæt ("container"),
sċræf ("cave"),
stæf ("staff"),
pæþ ("path"),
hwæl ("whale"), and
blæd ("blade"). • A-stems which end in
ġ,
ċ, or
sċ after a vowel have hard
g,
c, or
sc in the plural:
fisċ /fiʃ/ ("fish"), pl.
fiscas /ˈfiskɑs/. Other examples include
dæġ ("day"),
weġ ("way"),
twiġ ("twig"),
disċ ("plate"),
dīċ ("ditch"),
līċ ("corpse"), and
wīċ ("village"). • If a noun ends in
h, the
h disappears before inflectional endings. This
lengthens the preceding
vowel or
diphthong (if it is short). Unless the
h comes right after a consonant, it also
deletes the following vowel, except in the genitive plural, where an
-n- has been inserted to prevent this from happening. All this is exemplified by two masculine a-stems,
sċōh and
fearh: • If an a-stem ends in
-u, the
u is replaced with
w before inflectional endings:
searu ("machine"), dat. sg.
searwe. • Something similar happens with a subgroup of ō-stem nouns called the wō-stems. These nouns once ended in
-wu, before a sound change occurred which caused the
w to disappear in the nominative singular; subsequently some also lost the
-u by high vowel apocope. By the written period, they are indistinguishable from other ō-stems in the nominative singular, except they keep the
w before inflectional endings. These nouns include
sċeadu ("shadow/shade"),
sinu ("sinew"),
mǣd ("meadow"), and
lǣs ("pasture"). ==Adjectives==