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Middle Welsh | |
---|---|
Kymraec | |
Native to | Wales |
Era | ApproachedModern Welsh by about the 15th century |
Indo-European
| |
Early forms | |
Latin | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | wlm |
wlm | |
Glottolog | midd1363 |
This article containsIPA phonetic symbols. Without properrendering support, you may seequestion marks, boxes, or other symbols instead ofUnicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, seeHelp:IPA. |
Middle Welsh (Welsh:Cymraeg Canol, Middle Welsh:Kymraec) is the label attached to theWelsh language of the 12th to 15th centuries, of which much more remains than for any earlier period. This form of Welsh developed directly fromOld Welsh (Welsh:Hen Gymraeg).
Middle Welsh is the language of nearly all surviving early manuscripts of theMabinogion,[1] although the tales themselves are certainly much older. It is also the language of most of the manuscripts ofmediaeval Welsh law. Middle Welsh is reasonably intelligible, albeit with some work, to a modern-day Welsh speaker.[2]
Thephonology of Middle Welsh is quite similar to that of modern Welsh, with only a few differences.[3] The letteru, which today represents/ɨ/ in North Western Welsh dialects and/i/ in South Welsh and North East Welsh dialects, represented theclose central rounded vowel/ʉ/ in Middle Welsh. The diphthongaw is found in unstressed final syllables in Middle Welsh, while in Modern Welsh it has becomeo (e.g. Middle Welshmarchawc = Modern Welshmarchog "horseman"). Similarly, the Middle Welsh diphthongsei andeu have becomeai andau in final syllables, e. g. Middle Welshseith = modernsaith "seven", Middle Welshheul = modernhaul "sun".[4]
The vowels are as follows:
Front | Central | Back | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Unrounded | Rounded | |||
Close | i | ɨ | ʉ | u |
Mid | e | ə | o | |
Open | a |
Vowel length is predictable: vowels are long in monosyllables unless followed by a geminate or one of the consonants/p/,/t/,/k/,/m/,/ŋ/ or a geminate.[5] The vowels could combine into the following falling diphthongs:[6]
1. ending in/w/:/aw/,/ew/,/iw/,/ɨw/ ~/əw/
2. ending in/ɨ/:/aɨ/,/oɨ/,/uɨ/
3. others:/ej/,/eʉ/ (and possibly/æj/,/æʉ/)
The diphthongs/æj/ and/æʉ/, whose first component gradually changed into/a/, were originally allophones of/ej/ and/eʉ/, respectively, and no distinction between the two was expressed in Middle Welsh spelling, so their presence during most of Middle Welsh is not immediately observable. However, the fact that the modern pronunciations beginning with an/a/ occur in all word-final syllables, regardless of stress, makes it plausible that their distinctness from/ej/ and/eʉ/ was a legacy from the time before the stress shifted from final to penultimate syllables in Old Welsh. The full opening to/aj/ and/aʉ/ may have been completed at some point in later Middle Welsh, possibly the thirteenth to fourteenth centuries.[7]
The consonants are as follows:[8]
Labial | Dental | Alveolar | Lateral | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nasal | m̥ʰ | m | n̥ʰ | n | ŋ̊ʰ | ŋ | ||||||||
Stop | p | b | t | d | k | ɡ | ||||||||
Fricative | ɸ | β | θ | ð | s | ɬ | ʃ | x | h | |||||
Trill | r̥ʰ | r | ||||||||||||
Approximant | l | j | w |
Consonants may be geminate./ʃ/ is mostly found in loanwords such assiacet 'jacket'.
Stress was placed on the penultimate syllable with some exceptions such as the causative verbs in-háu, e.g.sicrháu ('to make things secure' fromsicr 'secure'). In terms of intonation, the tonal peak must have been aligned with the post-stress syllable, reflecting the earlier final stress of the late Brythonic period, since this persists even in Modern Welsh.[9]
Theorthography of Middle Welsh was not standardised, and there is great variation between manuscripts in how certain sounds are spelled. Some generalisations of differences between Middle Welsh spelling and Modern Welsh spelling can be made.[3] For example, the possessive adjectivesei "his, her",eu "their" and the prepositioni "to" are very commonly spelledy in Middle Welsh, and are thus spelled the same as thedefinite articley and the indirectrelative particley. A phrase such asy gath is therefore ambiguous in Middle Welsh between the meaning "the cat" (spelled the same in Modern Welsh), the meaning "his cat" (modernei gath), and the meaning "to a cat" (moderni gath). Thevoicedstop consonants/dɡ/ are represented by the letterst c at the end of a word, e.g.diffryt "protection" (moderndiffryd),redec "running" (modernrhedeg). The sound/k/ is very often spelledk before the vowelse i y (in Modern Welsh, it is always spelled with ac, e.g. Middle Welshkeivyn = modernceifn "third cousin"). The sound/v/ is usually spelled with au orv (these are interchangeable as in Latin MSS), except at the end of a word, where it is spelled with anf (in Modern Welsh, it is always spelled with af, e.g. Middle Welshauall = modernafal "apple tree"). The sound/ð/ is usually spelled with ad (in Modern Welsh, it is spelled with add, e.g. Middle Welshdyd = moderndydd "day"). The sound/r̥/ is spelledr and is thus not distinguished from/r/ (in Modern Welsh, they are distinguished asrh andr respectively, e.g. Middle Welshredec "running" vs. modernrhedeg). The epenthetic vowel/ə/ is usually written, in contrast to Modern Welsh: e.g.mwnwgyl rather thanmwnwgl "neck".[10]
In general, the spelling is both variable and historical and does not reflect some sound changes that had taken place by the Middle Welsh period, most notably the lenition. Some of the less predictable letter-sound correspondences are the following:[11]
grapheme | phoneme |
---|---|
⟨ae⟩ (⟨ay⟩) | /aɨ/ |
⟨oe⟩ (⟨oy⟩) | /oɨ/ |
⟨u⟩ | /ʉ/ /β/ /w/ |
⟨w⟩ | /u/ (hence⟨wy⟩ for/uɨ/) /w/ (hence⟨wy⟩ for/wɨ/) |
⟨y⟩ | /ɨ/ (word-finally) /ə/ (elsewhere, reflecting mutation – see below) /j/ (between consonants and vowels) /i/ (occasionally; in the 3rd person possessivey and the negative particleny) |
⟨e⟩ | /e/ /ɨ/ (only word-finally; especially in early texts)[12] /ə/ (non-word-finally; especially in early texts)[12] |
⟨ei⟩ | possibly/æj/ (word-finally) /ej/ (elsewhere)[7] |
⟨eu⟩,⟨ev⟩ | possibly/æʉ/ (word-finally) /eʉ/ (elsewhere)[7] |
⟨mh⟩ | /m̥/ |
⟨nh⟩ | /n̥/ |
⟨ngh⟩,⟨gh⟩ | /ŋ̊/ |
⟨f⟩ | /ɸ/ /β/ (medially and word-finally) |
⟨ff⟩ (mostly medially and finally) | /ɸ/ |
⟨th⟩ | /θ/ (rarely/ð/) |
⟨ch⟩ | /x/ |
⟨ll⟩ or⟨ỻ⟩ | /ɬ/ |
⟨r⟩ | /r/ /r̥/ |
⟨v⟩ or⟨ỽ⟩ | /β/ |
⟨d⟩ | /ð/ /d/ |
⟨b⟩ | /b/ |
⟨g⟩ | /ɡ/ /ŋ/ (occasionally) |
⟨p⟩ | /p/ /b/ (postvocalically) |
⟨t⟩ | /t/ /d/ (postvocalically) |
⟨k⟩ (before front vowels) | /k/ |
⟨c⟩ (before back vowels and word-finally) | /k/ /ɡ/ (postvocalically) |
⟨si⟩ (before other vowels, rare) | /ʃ/ |
Middle Welsh is closer to the other medieval Celtic languages, e.g. Old Irish, in its morphology. For example, the endings-wŷs, -ws, -es and-as are used for 3rd person singular of the preterite in Middle Welsh as well as the form-odd. In the same person and tense exists the old reduplicated preteritekigleu 'he heard' of the verbklywet 'to hear', which corresponds to the Old Irish·cúalae '(s)he heard' from the verbro·cluinethar '(s)he hears'.
Middle Welsh also retains more plural forms of adjectives that do not appear in modern Welsh, e.g.cochion, plural ofcoch 'red'.
The nominal plural ending-awr is very common in Middle Welsh, but has been replaced in modern Welsh by-au.
Like modern Welsh, Middle Welsh exhibits in its morphology numerous vowel alternations as well as the typical Insular Celtic initial consonant mutations.
There is a productive alternation between final syllables and non-final syllables known asmutation[13][14] orcentring ([15]), which is by necessity triggered by the addition of any suffix and operates as follows:
final | non-final | example |
---|---|---|
w | y/ə/ | bwrd 'board' – pl.byrdeu dwg 's/he leads' –dygaf 'I lead' |
y/ɨ/ | y/ə/ | cledyf 'sword' – pl.cledyfeu |
aw | o | brawt 'brother' – pl.broder hawl 's/he claims' –holaf 'I claim' marchawg 'horseman' –marchoges 'horsewoman' |
The centring mutation is due to a process of vowel reduction that operated earlier, in late Brythonic, when the stress was placed on the last syllable.[9]
Further, there are two types of alternations that are caused by following vowels (extant or lost) and are no longer entirely productive, but nonetheless very frequent in the morphology. The first type isultimate affection,[13][14] which occurs in the last syllable of a word and is caused by a vowel that used to be located in the next syllable. The originally triggering vowel is eitheri ora, hence the alternations are referred to asi-affection[15] anda-affection. The more common type isi-affection, which occurs in plurals with a zero ending and in the present singular of many verbs. In addition, in some cases, the singular has an affected vowel, but the plural does not (this has been termed 'reversion'). The alternation operates as follows:
non-mutated | mutated | example |
---|---|---|
a,ae | ei | bard 'bard' – pl.beird maen 'stone' – pl.mein safaf 'I stand' –seif 's/he stands' dragon 'dracons' –dreic 'dracon' Saeson 'Saxons' –Seis 'Saxon' |
e,o,w | y | gwelaf 'I see' –gwyl 's/he sees' corn 'horn' – pl.cyrn gwr 'man' – pl.gwyr |
oe | wy | oen 'lamb' – pl.wyn |
Ultimatea-affection is found, most notably, in the feminine forms of adjectives that do have gender declension, and it changes the stem vowels as follows:[16][17]
non-mutated | mutated | example |
---|---|---|
y | e | gwynn (masc.) –gwenn (fem.) 'white' |
w | o | crwm (masc.) –crom (fem.) 'bent' |
The second type of affection is triggered by (typically) extant close vowels or semivowels in the following syllables, and is hence known as penultimate affection (in fact, it also reaches the antepenult in Middle Welsh). The effect varies somewhat depending on the triggering vowel,[18] hence one may speak more specifically, for instance, ofy-affection ([15]). Penultimatey-affection is a regular feature of verb forms with an ending containingy (e.g. the second person singular and plural in the present indicative). Both it and other types of penultimate affection may also occur due to the addition of suffixes containing the respective vowels, e.g. in the plural of nouns.
non-mutated | trigger | mutated | example |
---|---|---|---|
a | y,i (/i/) | e | caraf 'I love' –kery 'thou lovest' dar 'oak' – pl.deri cawr 'giant' –kewri |
a, e | i (/j/) | ei | mab 'son' – pl.meibyon |
ae | i (/i/ or/j/) | ei | maer 'steward' – pl.meiri |
ae | y | ey | caer 'fort' – pl.keyryd |
Penultimate and ultimate affection may occur in one and the same form, e.g.castell 'castle' – pl.kestyll,manach 'monk' –meneich 'monks', or, with reversion,elein 'fawn' – pl.alaned (the latter two may then be termed cases of 'ei-affection'[15]).
In contrast to modern Welsh, the consonant mutations are not always reflected in Middle Welsh orthography; this is especially true of the nasal mutation.
1. Lenition / soft mutation
Lenition turns voiceless stop consonants into voiced ones and voiced stops into fricatives (further turning into zero in the case of/ɣ/).
non-mutated | mutated |
---|---|
p | b |
t | d |
c | g |
b | f/v/ |
d/d/ | d/ð/ |
g | ∅ |
m | f/v/ |
ll | l |
r/r̥/ | r/r/ |
It occurs most notably:[19]
a. in the second members of compounds:march 'horse' >moruarch 'sea-horse, whale';
b. in a noun preceded by the possessive pronouns for 3rd singular masculine and 2nd singular possessors (y 'his' anddy/th 'thy'):kyuoeth 'wealth, realm' >y gyuoeth 'his wealth, realm';
c. in a noun preceded by the numerals 1, 2 and 7:march 'horse' >deu uarch 'two horses';
d. in a noun or adjective preceded by a name that it describes:brenhin 'king' >Keredic Vrenhin 'Ceredig the king';bendigeit 'blessed' >Catwaladyr Uendigeit 'Cadwaladr the blessed';
e. in a possessor noun or an adjective preceded by a feminine singular noun or a semantically dual noun:Morgant >gulat Uorgant 'the land of Morgan',tec 'fair' >y wreic deccaf 'the fairest lady',mawr 'big' >deu uarch uawr 'two big horses';
f. in a feminine singular noun preceded by the definite article:gwreig >y wreig 'the woman';
g. in a noun following the prepositionsa,am,ar,at,dan,gan,heb,hyt,y,is,o,tros,trwy,uch,wrth, the conjunctionneu or the vocative particlea;
h. in a noun functioning as the subject after some verbal forms (in contrast to modern Welsh). It is common after many 3rd person forms of the verb 'to be', and after the 3rd person singular imperfect and pluperfect (sometimes also preterite) of other verbs. It also occurs in subjects separated from their verbs;
i. in a noun functioning as the object after most verbal forms, but sometimes not after the 3rd singular present and preterite;
j. in a noun or adjective functioning as a nominal predicate after the verb 'to be' or the predicative particlesyn andy: mawr 'big'> ot oed uawr ef 'if he was big';
k. in a noun or adjective used adverbially (including after the adverbial particleyn);
l. in a verb after the relative pronouna, the interrogative pronounspa,py andcwt, the interrogative particlea, the negative particlesny andna, the affirmative particlesneu,ry anda, the particleyt, many prefixes such asgo- anddi-, the conjunctionspan,tra andyny;
m. in the verb 'to be' after a nominal predicate.
2. Nasal mutation
The nasal mutation replaces stops with corresponding nasals (while keeping them voiceless if the original stops were voiceless):
non-mutated | mutated |
---|---|
p | mh |
t | nh |
c | ngh |
b | m |
d/d/ | n |
g | ng |
It occurs:[20]
a. after the prepositionyn 'in' (and sometimes also the predicative and adverbial particleyn):pob 'every' >ymhob 'in every'. This does not occur with verbal nouns.
b. the possessive pronounvy 'my':brawt 'brother' >vy mrawt 'my brother'
c. the numerals 7, 9, 19, 12, 15, 100, and by extension some others.
3. Spirant mutation
The spirant mutation replaced voiceless stops with fricatives:
non-mutated | mutated |
---|---|
p | ph |
t | th |
c | ch |
It occurs[21] after:
a. the possessive pronoun for 3rd singular feminine possessorsy 'her':penn 'head' >y phenn 'her head'
b. the conjunction/prepositiona 'and, with', the conjunctionsno 'than',na 'neither, nor' ando 'if', the preposition and adverbtra 'over, very'.
c. the negative particlesny, na (note that these also cause the spirant mutation), the affirmative particlesneu andry, many prefixes such asgo- anddi- (note that these also cause lenition of the other mutable consonants)
d. the numerals 3 and 6.
e. the interrogativecw 'where?'
4. Aspiration (sandhih)
The consonanth appears initially before vowels after certain pronouns, namely the possessive pronounsy 'her',yn/an 'our',eu/y(w) 'their' and the 1st singular 'infixed' pronoun-m as well as the 'infixed' pronoun -e/y when it expresses a 3rd person object (be it singular masculine, singular feminine, or plural); e.g. wynneb 'face'> y hwynneb 'her face'.[22]
5. Provection
Provection is a phenomenon that causes devoicing of consonants within certain medial consonant clusters that may arise via morphological processes.[23] Two identical voiced stops yield a voiceless geminate stop (e.g.d +d >tt), a voiced stop is devoiced before another voiced stop or voiceless consonant (d +b >tb ortp), a voiced consonant may be devoiced before a sonorant (d +r >tr) and is always devoiced before a voiceless consonant (d +s >ts) and merges with a following /h/ into a voiceless geminate (e.g.d +h >tt).
There are two genders, masculine and feminine.
There is a definite article which precedes the noun phrase and has the formy- before a consonant andyr- before a vowel or/h/.[24]
Noun plurals may end in a variety of unpredictable endings such as-eu,-(i)on,-oed,-ed, -yd,-et,-ot,-(i)eit,-awt,-awr,-ant,-er,-yr,-i or zero suffix with ultimatei affection in the root[25][26]). A vowel change may also accompany the addition of an ending; apart from the predictable option of centering, that vowel change may also be a penultimatei,y orj affection (before-ion,-ieit,-i,-yd or rarely-ieu) or, conversely, a reversion of ultimatei affection before endings such as-eu,-on,-ed and-ot.[27] The special plural suffix-os has diminutive meaning. There are also singulative endings-yn (masculine) and-en (feminine), which produce singulars not only from collectives, but also from plurals:blew 'hair' >blewyn 'a hair';llyc 'mouse' >llygot 'mice' >llygoden 'mouse'.[28]
There is no grammatical case. Nouns may be placed after another nouns to express a possessor, sometimes triggering a mutation, for which see above.
Some, but not all adjectives may have special plural and feminine forms, and concord is not always observed. The plurals may be formed with a zero ending and ultimatei-affection or with the ending-(y)on/-(j)on/, which may also cause mutation or penultimatej-affection. The adjective-forming suffixes-adwy,-eit,-in,-lyt never allow plural formation. Feminine forms of adjectives are derived from masculine ones via ultimatea-affection.[16]
The equative degree is formed by the suffix-(h)et, the preposed particlemor or the prefixky(f)-. The forms in-(h)et are preceded byky(n). E.g.ky uelynet oed a'r eur 'it was as yellow as gold'. The comparative is formed with the suffix-ach (the comparandum is introduced by the aspirating conjunctionno(c) 'than') and the superlative uses the suffix-(h)af (the comparandum is introduced with the prepositiono 'of').[29]
Adjectives could be used adverbially when preceded by the particley(n) (kilyaw y gyflym 'withdrew hurriedly'); when they were placed first in the sentence or were in the comparative, they did not require the particle either.[30]
Thepersonal pronouns have many forms with different functions. Theindependent forms are commonly used as objects, syntactically isolated or as fronted subjects. Thereduplicated forms express emphasis, the 'conjunctive' ones express contrast, and the 'infixed' ones usually express objects or possessors, while being added to various particles and function words. Theprepositional forms are added to prepositions ('conjugating' them). The forms as follows:[31]
Simple | Reduplicated | Conjunctive | Infixed | Possessive unstressed | Possessive stressed | Prepositional | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st sing. | (m)i | miví | (m)inheu | -'m (aspirating) | vy(n) | meu | -f |
2nd sing. | ti/di | tidí | titheu/ditheu | -th | dy | teu | -t |
3rd sing masc. | ef | efó | ynteu | -y/e/s (aspirating as object) | y (leniting) | eidaw | -(dd/th)aw |
3rd sing. fem. | hi | hihí | hitheu | -y/e (aspirating) | y (aspirating) | eidi | -ei/(dd/th)i |
1st pl. | ni | niní | ninheu | -n (aspirating as possessive) | yn, an (aspirating) | einym | -m |
2nd pl. | chwi | chwichwí | chwitheu | -ch | ych, ach | einwch | -wch |
3rd pl. | wy(nt) | wyntwy | wynteu | -y/e/s (aspirating) | eu, y(w)(aspirating) | eidu | -(dd/th)unt |
The variantsi anddi of the 1st and 2nd singular simple pronouns andinneu andditheu of the corresponding conjunctive pronouns are used when these follow a conjugated verb, preposition or possessed noun; Evans (1970) terms them 'affixed' pronouns.
In the 3rd singular infixed pronoun, the allomorph-i/e is used after the wordsa,y,pan,tra andyny, while-s is used afterny,na,ry,neu,can,gwedy,kyt,o andpei.
Thereflexive pronoun consists of the wordhun (pl.hunein), preceded by a possessive pronoun (as inmyself,yourself etc.).
The most commonrelative pronoun isa.
Thedemonstrative pronouns may beproximal or distal and distinguish, besides the masculine and the feminine form, a neuter one, which, however, corresponds with the plural. They are as follows:
sing.masc. | sing.fem. | neuter and plural | |
---|---|---|---|
proximal | hwnn | honn | hynn |
distal | hwnnw | honno | hynny |
Some demonstrative adverbs areynaeth 'then',yno 'there' (yna can mean both),ynoeth 'thither',yma(n) 'here',(y)velly 'so, thus'. Now wasnw in early texts, but later weithon, i.e.y weith hon (lit. 'this time') oryn awr (lit. 'in/the hour').[32]
Sawl is 'so many'.Meint 'number, size',ryw 'kind' andpeth 'thing' can be used in various complex constructions with pronominal elements.
The maininterrogative pronouns arepwy 'who' andpa/py 'which'. 'What' can be expressed aspa beth 'which thing?'. Others arepet 'how many',cwt 'where',pan 'whence',pi 'whose' (always merged with a copula –pieu =pi+yw,pioed =pi+oed etc.).
Universal pronouns arepawp,oll 'all' (with adjectival variantspop andholl) andcwbyl 'the whole'.
Indefinite pronouns arenep 'any(one)' anddim 'any(thing)'.[33]
There are four tenses – present(-future), preterite, imperfect and pluperfect – and two moods (indicative and subjunctive). A subjunctive is distinguished from the indicative only in the present and the imperfect. The verb agrees with the subject (but it agrees in number only if the subject is placed before the verb, not after it). The inflection of the verb distinguishes two numbers and three persons, as well as a special 'impersonal' form, which is used in a way similar to a passive.
caru, "to love" | bot, "to be" | |
---|---|---|
I | caraf | wyf |
Thou | kery | wyt |
He, she, it | car | yw, (y) mae, ((y) taw), oes |
We | carwn | ym |
You (pl.) | kerych | ywch |
They | carant | ynt, maent |
Impersonal | kerir | ys, yssit |
Contrary to the example ofcaru, the 3rd singular present of many[34] or most[35] verbs hasi-affection, e.g.arch-af 'I ask', buteirch 'he asks'. Furthermore, some verbs, especially denominatives, have a 3rd singular ending -(h)a (originally part of a suffix). Some other, rare and archaic 3rd singular endings still occurring in Middle Welsh are-(h)it,-(h)awt,-yt,-yd. Of the different forms of the 3rd person ofbot,yw,ynt follow the predicate, whereas(y) mae,(y) maent are placed in the beginning of the clause (and can alone mean 'where?' in questions);oes is used in negations, questions and conditions, mostly in the sense 'there is' ('there is' is also the meaning of the impersonalyssit;ys is used mostly with verbal nouns and in the mixed order, for which see the sectionSyntax).[36][37]
caru, "to love" | bot, "to be" | |
---|---|---|
I | carwn | oedwn |
Thou | carut | oedut |
He, she, it | carei | oed |
We | carem | oedem |
You (pl.) | carewch | oedewch |
They | kerynt | oedynt |
Impersonal | kerit | oedit |
The 3rd singular ending may also be-i with penultimatei-affection.
caru, "to love" | bot, "to be" | |
---|---|---|
I | kereis | buum |
Thou | kereist | buost |
He, she, it | carawd | bu |
We | carassom | buam/buom |
You (pl.) | carassauch | buawch |
They | carassant | buant/buont |
Impersonal | carwyt | buwyt |
Contrary to the example ofcaru, and unlike modern Welsh, the 3rd person singular preterite form most frequently ends in-wys or-ws, or in-s preceded by some other vowel as in-as,-es or-is, e.g.gallws 'was able'.[38][39]
caru, "to love" | bot, "to be" | |
---|---|---|
I | carasswn | buasswn |
Thou | carassut | buassut |
He, she, it | carassei | buassei |
We | carassem | |
You (pl.) | carassewch | |
They | carassynt | buassynt |
Impersonal | carassit |
caru, "to love" | bot, "to be" | |
---|---|---|
I | car(h)wyf | bwyf (bof) |
Thou | ker(h)ych | bych (bwyr) |
He, she, it | car(h)o | bo (boet) |
We | car(h)om | bom |
You (pl.) | car(h)och | boch |
They | car(h)ont | bont |
Impersonal | car(h)er | byther |
The second person singular exhibitsy-affection.
caru, "to love" | bot, "to be" | |
---|---|---|
I | car(h)wn | bewn |
Thou | car(h)ut | beut |
He, she, it | car(h)ei | bei |
We | car(h)em | beym |
You (pl.) | car(h)ewch | |
They | ker(h)ynt | beynt |
Impersonal | ker(h)it | bythit |
The/h/ of the subjunctives is in the process of disappearing after vowels and sonorants, but causes provection (devoicing and gemination) after voiced consonants: e.g.dycko corresponding to 1st person singular indicativedygaf 'bring'.[40] The subjunctive is used to express wishes, indefiniteness, purpose or a concession.[41]
caru, "to love" | bot, "to be" | |
---|---|---|
I | ||
Thou | car | byd |
He, she, it | caret | bit/boet |
We | carwn | bydwn |
You (pl.) | kerwch | bydwch |
They | carent | bwynt |
The 3rd singular may also end in-(h)it.
Note:Bot also has special 'consuetudinal' (habitual) forms for the present and past mostly formed from the stembyd-.
caru, "to love" | |
---|---|
verbal noun | caru |
verbal adjective I (past passive participle) | caredic |
verbal adjective II (future passive participle) | caradwy |
Both of the verbal adjectives have passive meaning: the one in-edic is a past participle passive (car-edic 'loved') and the one in-adwy is a future participle passive orgerundive (cred-adwy 'credible'). Less common suffixes with a past passive meaning are-at,-(h)awt and-eit.[42]
The verbal noun is formed in a great variety of ways,[43] the most common ones being:
1. just the verb stem with a zero suffix:adaw 'leave'
2. with the suffix-u, which is typical of stems containing-a,-ae,-e- and-y-:caru 'love',credu 'believe',kyrchy 'approach', including denominative stems in-ych-:bredychu 'betray'
3. with the suffix-aw, which is typical of stems ending in-i or containing-i-,-u-,-wy- or-eu- (keissyaw 'seek',gwisgaw 'dress',urdaw 'ordain',kwynaw 'complain',blodeuaw 'blossom')
4. with the suffix-i, which is typical of stems containing-o-/-oe- or ending in-w (adoli 'worship',merwi 'die'); there are also some stems containing-a-, which then undergo penultimatei-affection:erchi 'request'.
There are also some less common suffixes such as-ach,-aeth,-(a)el,-ec,-(e/y/u/i/ei)t,-n,wyn,-(ou)ein,-fa(n) and-s.
Verbal nouns are used very frequently in many periphrastic constructions, including prepositional phrases (with the prepositiony – lit. 'towards V-ing', i.e. 'in order to V', with the prepositionyn – lit. 'in (the process of) V-ing'), as an object of the verbgwneithur 'do' (lit. 'to do a V-ing'). They may even occur alone without a finite verb within a narrative (lit. 'And (there was) a V-ing'). The subject could be introduced byo 'from'.[44]
Prepositions are 'conjugated', i.e. pronominal morphemes are added to the prepositions. The preposition may also undergo other changes, e.g.:
independent form | pronominal form | meaning |
---|---|---|
am | amdan- | 'about' |
ar | arn- | 'on' |
at | att- | 'to' |
o | oha/on- | 'from', 'of' |
rwng/r̥uŋ/ | ro-, 3rd pers.ryd- | 'between' |
yn | ynd-/ənð-/ | 'in' |
A vowel appears before the preposition; it may be-a-,-o- or-y-, depending on the specific preposition, e.g.ar 'on' –arn-a-f 'on me',rac (/r̥aɡ/) 'before' –rag-of 'before me',gan 'from' –genhyf 'from me'.[45]
'on' | 'before' | 'with' | 'to' | |
---|---|---|---|---|
basic form | ar | rac | gan | y |
'me' | arnaf | ragof | genhyf | ymi |
'thee' | arnat | ragot | genhyt | ytti |
'him' | arnaw | racdaw | ganthaw | itaut |
'her' | arnei | racdei | genthi | idi |
'us' | arnam | ragom | genhym | ynni |
'you' (pl.) | arnawch | ragoch | genhwch | ywch |
'them' | arnadut, arnunt | racdut, racdunt | gantut, gantunt | udu(t), udunt |
Most prepositions cause lenition (am,ar,gan etc.), butyn 'in' causes nasal mutation anda(c) 'with' causes spirant mutation. The prepositions themselves often occur with a lenited or non-lenited first consonant. Some notable prepositions area(c) 'with',am 'around',amcan y 'about',ar 'on',at 'to',can(t) 'with, by',ker 'near, by',ech 'out of',eithyr 'outside',erbyn 'by, for, against',gwedy 'after',heb 'without',herwyd 'according to',gerfyd 'by',hyt 'until',is 'below',mal 'like',o(c) 'from',parth 'towards',rac (/r̥aɡ/) 'for', (y)rwng (/r̥uŋ/) 'between', tan 'under'y 'to, for',tra(c) 'over, beyond',tros 'for, instead of',trwy 'through',y ('to', 'for', 'belonging to'), (y)tu (a(c)) 'towards',uch 'above',wrth 'at, by, for',y(n) 'in' (y before infixed pronouns),yr 'during, for'. Prepositional phrases often function as complex prepositions:ym penn 'at the end of' (frompenn 'head, end'). As indicated elsewhere,y(n) may also introduce nominal predicates and words used adverbially.
As in modern written Welsh, the VSO word order (Gwelod y brenin gastell: "Saw the king a castle") is not used exclusively in Middle Welsh, but irregular and mixed orders are also used:Y brenin a uelod gastell: ("[It was] the king that saw a castle"). The suggestion is that the mixed order places emphasis on the subject, and is often used in Welsh today to emphasise something. The formal difference between the two is that a negative particle (ny/na) precedes the subject in the mixed order (thusNy brenin a uelod gastell would mean "It was not the king that saw the castle", but precedes the verb in the irregular order (thusBrenin ny uelod gastell = "The king did not see a castle"). Furthermore, the mixed order could preserve the copula that originally participated in this cleft construction (Ys y brenin a uelod gastell).
Unlike modern Welsh, however, the irregular or 'abnormal' orders are much more common than the 'normal' one, even though they require an additional particle to be grammatical.[46] There are two main variations:
1. with a subject or object 'fronted' before the verb (SVO or OVS) and followed by the particlea (causing lenition) – e.g.Arawn a eirch y wrogaeth instead ofEirch Arawn y wrogaeth 'Arawn asks for his homage';[47]
2. with an adverbial expression 'fronted' before the verb (AdvV) and followed by the particley(d) (yd before a vowel; causing lenition) – e.g.Y Lynn Cuch y uynn hela instead ofmynn ef hela y Lynn Cuch 'he wanted to hunt in Glynn Cuch'.[48]
Both particles may also be replaced byry oryr.[49]
When the verb of a sentence is a copula governing a nominal predicate (P), early texts preferred the order VPS, but PVS becomes more common in the bulk of Middle Welsh prose. If the nominal predicate is not fronted, it may be introduced by the particley(n):y bu (yn) barawt ('it's ready').[50]
A direct question is introduced bya:A dywedy di ynni? 'Will you tell us?'[51]
Modifiers, both adjectives and 'genitives', normally follow their nouns, e.g.gwreic dec 'a fair woman',pendeuic Dyuet 'the prince of Dyfed' (with lenition if the nouns are feminine). The nouns indicating a possessor (the 'genitive nouns') are, morphologically, just unmarked nouns juxtaposed with another noun (apart from the lenition after a feminine noun). Independent pronouns can be appended in the same way, redundantly, after a noun already modified by a possessive pronoun (y erchwys ef, lit. 'his dogs (of) him') and likewise after a 'conjugated preposition' (arnaf i, lit. 'on-me me'). An adjective may precede a noun if connected with it by the particlea 'which' (maur a teith 'a long journey') and a few adjectives such ashen 'old' andprif 'chief' are also normally placed in front of the noun.[52]
Possession is expressed literally as '(possessed) is with (possessor)', rather than with a verb 'to have'.[53]
Only the cardinal numerals for 2 to 4 and the ordinal numerals for 3 to 4 have a gender distinction. The ordinal numerals are mostly formed with the suffix-uet, less commonly-et or-yd (masculine) /-ed (feminine), while '1st' and '2nd' aresuppletively formed. The morphologically simple cardinal numerals and their corresponding ordinal numerals are as follows:
cardinal | ordinal | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
masc. | fem. | masc. | fem. | |
1 | un | kyntaf | ||
2 | deu | dwy | eil | |
3 | tri | teir | trydy(d) | tryde(d) |
4 | pedwar | pedeir | pedwyryd | pedwyred |
5 | pym(p), pum(p) | pymhet | ||
6 | chwe(ch) | chwechet | ||
7 | seith | seithuet | ||
8 | wyth, oeth | wythuet | ||
9 | naw | nawuet | ||
10 | dec | decuet | ||
20 | ugeint | ugeinuet | ||
100 | can(t) | canuet | ||
1000 | mil | NA |
The numerals from 11 to 19 are formed in a variety of ways. 12 and 15 simply conjoin a simple numeral with the word 'ten'; 11, 13, 14 are literally 'N on ten'; 16, 17, 18, 19 are 'N on fifteen', and 18 is 'two nines'. The original pattern was that of 12 and 15, and some early texts contain words for 11, 14 and 19 that follow the same pattern. The ordinals apply the ordinal form sometimes of the unit and sometimes with the word ten.
numeral | literally | ordinal | |
---|---|---|---|
11 | un ar dec | 'one on ten' | unuet ar dec (undecuet) |
12 | deudec | 'two-ten' | deudecuet |
13 | tri/teir ar dec | 'three on ten' | trydydec |
14 | pedwar/pedeir ar dec | 'four on ten' | |
15 | pymthec | 'five-ten' | |
16 | un ar bymthec | 'one on fifteen' | |
17 | deu/dwy ar bymthec | 'two on fifteen' | |
18 | tri/teir ar bymthec | 'three on fifteen' | |
19 | pedwar/pedeir ar bymthec | 'four on fifteen' |
Between 20 and 40, numbers are expressed as 'N on twenty'. The numbers from 40 to 180 are expressed using avigesimal system, with multiples of 20 ('N twenties'), and, if necessary, units exceeding the nearest multiple designated as 'N and N twenties' (or, sometimes, as 'N twenties and N').
numeral | literally | |
---|---|---|
21 | un ar hugein(t) | 'one on twenty' |
30 | dec ar hugein(t) | 'ten on twenty' |
35 | pymthec ar hugein(t) | 'fifteen on twenty' |
40 | deu ugein(t), deugein(t) | 'two twenties' |
41 | un a deu ugein(t), (deu ugein(t)a un) | 'one and two twenties', ('two twenties and one') |
50 | dec a deugein(t) | 'ten and two twenties' |
60 | tri ugein(t), trugein(t) | 'three twenties' |
80 | pedwar ugein(t) | 'four twenties' |
90 | dec a phedwar ugein(t) | 'ten and four twenties' |
120 | chwe ugein(t) | 'six twenties' |
140 | seith ugein(t) | 'seven twenties' |
160 | wyth ugein(t) | 'eight twenties' |
180 | naw ugein(t) | 'nine twenties' |
Hundreds and thousands are denoted by conjoining the unit they are multiples of with the words for 'hundred' and thousand. Exceeding units are indicated added to the hundred or the thousand using the word 'a(c)' 'and': 'N and N hundred' (or 'N hundred and N').
numeral | literally | |
---|---|---|
200 | deucant | 'two-hundred' |
300 | trychant | 'three-hundred' |
2000 | dwy vil | 'two thousand' |
101 | cant ac un / un a chant | 'a hundred and one' 'one and a hundred' |
In accordance with this, the number 6,666 is expressed aschue guyr a thri ugeint a chuechant a chue mil, i.e. 'six men and three twenties and six hundred and six thousand'. Both cardinal and ordinal numerals generally precede the nouns that they modify (except forkyntaf 'first'); the noun after a cardinal may be in the singular, as indeu wr 'two men', or in the plural. If the numeral is composite, the noun comes after the first element:teir llong ar dec 'three ships on ten', i.e. '13 ships'. The phrases with a cardinal can also be constructed as 'N of Xs', e.g.tri o wyr 'three men', and this is the normal pattern with thousands (pym mil o wyr '5000 men'). Sometimes, compounds are formed:cannwr 'a hundred men'.[54]
Medieval spelling[55] | Modernised spelling[56] | Literal translation[57] | |
---|---|---|---|
1. | Pwyll Pendeuic Dyuet a oed yn arglwyd ar seith cantref Dyuet. | Pwyll Pendefig Dyfed a oedd yn arglwydd ar seith cantref Dyfed. | Pwyll Prince of Dyved was lord over the seven Cantrevs (regions) of Dyved. |
2. | A threigylgweith yd oed yn Arberth, prif lys idaw. | A threiglweith ydd oedd yn Arberth, prif lys iddaw. | And once upon a time he was at Narberth, a chief palace belonging to him. |
3. | A dyuot yn y uryt ac yn y uedwl uynet y hela. | A dyfod yn ei fryd ac yn ei feddwl fyned i hela. | And 'it came to his face and into his thought' (i.e. he wanted) to go to hunt. |
4. | Sef kyueir o'y gyuoeth a uynnei y hela, Glynn Cuch. | Sef cyfeir o'i gyfoeth a fynnei ei hela, Glynn Cuch. | The place of his realm which he wanted to hunt (in) was Glynn (= 'the glen') Cuch. |
5. | Ac ef a gychwynnwys y nos honno o Arberth. | Ac ef a gychwynnwys y nos honno o Arberth. | And he started that night from Narberth. |
6. | Ac a doeth hyt ym Penn Llwyn Diarwya, | Ac a ddoeth hyd ym Mhenn Llwyn Diarwya. | And he came as far as in the beginning of Llwyn (= 'the grove') Diarwyd. |
7. | Ac yno y bu y nos honno. | Ac yno y bu y nos honno. | And there he was that night. |
8. | A thrannoeth yn ieuengtit y dyd kyuodi a oruc. | A thrannoeth yn ieuenctid y dydd cyfodi a orug. | And 'across the night' (= next day), 'in the youth of the day' (= in the morning) rise he did. |
9. | A dyuot y Lynn Cuch i ellwng e gwn dan y coet. | A dyfod i Lynn Cuch i ellwng ei gwn dan y coed. | And he (did) come to Glynn Cuch to let loose his dogs into the forest. |
10. | A chanu y gorn, a dechreu dygyuor yr hela. | A chanu ei gorn, a dechreu dygyfor yr hela. | And (did) sound his horn, and (did) 'stir' (= begin) the hunt. |