Germanic Languages MOC

Germanic Strong Conjugation Classes

One feature of the Germanic languages is a special form of ablaut which marks the past tense by a vowel change. The group of words this applies are called strong, in contrast to the remaining verbs which follow weak conjugation by dental suffix and the rarer preterite-present conjugation.

  1. Class 1 ⇌ drive / drove / driven

  2. Class 2 ⇌ choose / chose / chosen

  3. Class 3 ⇌ bind / bound / bound

  4. Class 4 ⇌ bear / bore / borne

  5. Class 5 ⇌ give / gave / given

  6. Class 6 ⇌ shake / shook / shaken

  7. Class 7 ⇌ fall / fell / fallen

In all modern Germanic languages, strong ablaut has ceased to be linguistically productive and become lexicalised. As such, the above "classes" which in the Proto-Germanic period were mostly intact and regular, but a combination of this decline in productivity and compounding sound changes broke this regularity and created a number of sub-groups.

Examples

The following examples are of the form infinitive / present indicative 3p. sg. / past indicative 3p. sg. / past indicative 4p pl. / past subjunctive 3p sg. / past participle. The vowel part of the past subjunctive is the same in Proto-Germanic as the vowel part of the past plural. This applies to descendants with a number of caveats:

Proto-Germanic

Omitted here is Class 7, as I need to do some more reading to fully understand this class.

Old High German

Middle High German

This section is currently incomplete.

Standard German

In the Middle High German period, Umlaut progressed in the subjunctive mood.


#state/tidy | #SemBr

Footnotes

  1. guess