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PROGRESS
IN
LANGUAGE
Of the
Studier over Engelske Kasus, the said
ACADEMY
(2nd January, 1892)
:
" Mr. Jespersen has long ago gained a high reputation as a phoneThe introductory essay will secure for him a distinguished
tician.
position
It is long since we read so philological thinkers. its kind. ... It seems strange that this
among
brilliant a
performance of
powerful and suggestive essay should be published as a mere introduction to a series of discussions
on English Grammar probably the it in a riper form, and we hope in ;
author will at some time re-issue
some language more widely known than Danish. [The body of contains an extraordinary amount of acute and highly .
.
.
the work]
probable reasoning, and not a few observations of facts hitherto overlooked. shall certainly look with keen interest for the .
.
.
We
succeeding instalments of his work."
PROGRESS
IN
LANGUAGE
WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO ENGLISH
BY
OTTO JESPERSEN,
PH. DR.
PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH I.V TMK UNIVERSITY OF COPENHAGENAUTHOR OF "THE ARTICULATIONS OF SPEECH SOUNDS"
"CHAUCER'S LIV
S
or,
UIGHTNING," ETC.
LONDON \V A N SOX N N SC H E N NEW YORK: MACMII.I.AX !:
I
,\
&
(
ABERDEEN UNIVERSITY PRESS.
PREFACE. THIS volume
is
translation of
my
an English Studier over Engelske Kasns,
to a certain extent
vied cn Indledning: Fremskridt i Sproget, which was submitted to the University of Copenhagen
February, 1891, as a dissertation for the Ph. D. degree, and appeared in print in April of that year. In preparing this English edition in
have, however, altered my book so materially as to make it in many respects an entirely new In the first place, what was originally work. I
1
only an introductory essay has been enlarged and made the principal part of the book, as Consealready indicated by the altered title. quently, I could only retain those chapters of the special investigation on the history of English cases which had some bearing on the central idea of chs. I
vi.
and
"Progress
vii.
he small numbers
of the Danish book
the changes
made
in
;
(formerly
in i.
Language," viz., and ii., on "the
in parentheses refer to the paragraphs they will enable the reader to judge of revising the work for this edition.
PREFACE. "
English Case-Systems
"
and on
Case-Shift-
Pronouns
while the last chapter, "), dealing with the history of voiced and voiceless consonants, was of too special a nature to be ings in the
inserted in this volume.
shall probably find an opportunity of reprinting part of this invesI
tigation in the introduction
to
the edition
of
Hart's Orthographic, which I am preparing for and I may the Early English Text Society ;
here provisionally refer the readers to Dr. Sweet's New English Grammar, 731, 86 1, 810, 813, 997, 999, 1001), 862, 863 (cf. also where I am glad to say that the eminent author has accepted even those of my results which
run counter to his
own
1
previous views. By have found place for
leaving out this chapter I the last two chapters of the present volume, of
which one
" (viii.
The English Group
Genitive
")
" entirely new; while the other, on the Origin of Language," was read in a somewhat shorter is
form before the Philological Congress in Copenhagen, on the 2ist of July, 1892, and printed in the Danish periodical Tilskueren^ in October of the same year. x
1076-87 of the same Grammar will be found to cover nearly the same ground as my ch. vii. (ii. in the Danish edition).
PREFACE.
Secondly, to
me
have
I
out whatever seemed
present any interest to the numerous especially
likely to
little
readers,
English
left
instances of Danish developments parallel to in the new those mentioned in chapter vii. ;
have refrained from giving such I hope some day to find an opportunity of publishing my Danish collections chapter
viii.
I
parallel cases, but
separately.
have taken due notice of those my Danish book in which reasons I were given for dissenting from my views must especially thank Professors Herman Moller and Arwid Johannson for opening my Thirdly, reviews of
I
;
s
even
to if
some weak
points in my arguments, have not been able to make their
I
opinions mine
;
on the contrary, a consideration
of their objections has only strengthened unbelief in the progressive tendency of languages In the linguistic literature which has
at large.
appeared since my Slurficr, to learn with regard to my
von
I
have found
own
subject;
little if
G.
Hie Sprachwissenschaft (L'-ip/i^, [891) had appeared before instead of after my Shuticr. it would probably have influenced my exposition, as should have been der
riginal English, by H. Barker (Lond., 1889).
.V.
/. D.
Roister
Ruskin,
=
(Udall, Sel.
=
?)
Roister Doister, Arber's reprint.
Selections
from
the
Writings of John Ruskin,
i.-ii.
Allen, 1893).
Sh. or Shak.
= Shakespeare, quoted
folio (1623);
in the spelling of the first
tne acts, scenes, and lines, numbered as in
the Globe edition; for Romeo and Juliet (Rom.
.
msen's edition has been used, in which the lines of the second quarto are numbered continuously the abbre>ns of the titles of the plays will be easily understood ;
;
All's,
As,
Ant., Cor., Cymb.,
L. L. L.
=
Love's Labour's
CONTRACTIONS. Lost,
Mcb.
etc.,
=
Macbeth (the numbering of the lines i H. IV.
according to A. Wagner's edition, Halle, 1890) = First Part of King Henry the Fourth. Shelley, Poet. W., Macmillan's
Sheridan, Dr.
;
one-volume edition.
W. = Dramatic Works
(T.).
=
Specimens of Early English, by (Morris and) Skeat, Spectator, H. Morley's edition (Routledge). Spec.
Storm, E. Phil. Sweet, H. E. S.
New
= =
English
Tennyson,
i.-iii.
Englische Philologie (Heilbronn, 1881).
History of English Sounds (1888)
Grammar
Poetical Works,
N. E. G.
;
=
(1892).
Macmillan's one-volume
edit.,
supple-
mented by Tauchnitz ed. The. or Thack. = Thackeray, V. F. = Vanity Fair (in the Minerva Library); P. or Pend. = Pendennis (T.); Esmond (T.).
Thenks awflly, Sketches in Cockney (Field & Tuer, 1890). The other abbreviations require no explanation the works of W. Black, Robert Browning, Byron, Conan Doyle, Miss ;
Muloch, R. L. Stevenson, Swift, Trollope (Troll.) and Mrs. Humphrey Ward are quoted from the Tauchnitz edition (T.), but in all other cases I have used editions printed in England.
TABLE OF CONTENTS. PAGE
CHAP. I.
II.
III.
IV.
V.
i
Introduction,
Ancient and Modern Languages,
18
Primitive Grammar, The History of Chinese and of Word-Order, The Development of Language,
VI. English Case-Systems, Old and Modern, VII. Case-Shiftings in the Pronouns,
VIII.
-
112
-
138 182
The English Group Appendix.
Genitive, "Bill Stumps his Mark,"
IX. Origin of Language, I.
II.
III.
-
Method, Sounds,
-
Grammar.
-
IV. Vocabulary, V. Conclusion,
279 etc.,
-
318
-
328 328
... -
-
-
40 80
-
338 3^5
350 354
CHAPTER
I.
INTRODUCTION.
1.
(i)
No
is
language
better suited than
English
to the purposes of the student who wishes, by means of historical investigation, to form an independent
opinion on the
life
and development of language
in
In English we have an almost uninterrupted general. series of written and printed works, extending over a period of more than a thousand years and, if we ;
arc
not contented with the results to be obtained
from these sources, comparative philology comes in, drawing its conclusions from all the cognate tongues, and showing us, with no little degree of certainty, the nature of the language spoken by the old Germans at
the time
when the
differentiation of the several
had as yet scarcely begun. The scientific inons of our century go still further back they have brought together Greek and Latin, German, Slavonic, Lithuanian, Celtic, Indian and Persian, as
tribes
:
one indissoluble unity through a long succession of parallelisms they have pointed out what is common to all these laiumagrs and have made it possible ;
PROGRESS IN LANGUAGE. to
some extent
guage used several
know where lived,
to
reconstruct
the
unwritten
lan-
intercourse
centuries
historically
termed,
in
before
accessible
by the ancestral people the era of any languages
to
we
If
us.
original Arian
the
(or, as
do it
is
not often
Indo-European or Indo-Germanic) people
we know much about
the structure of their
speech. 2. (i) During the course of the ages the language of the Arians has changed in a multiplicity of ways in the mouths of different nations but nowhere has the ;
more radically modified than in The amount and thoroughness of these England. modifications will perhaps be perceived most clearly if we take some recognised definition of the most essential
original type been
features
characterising Arian speech, in opposition shall motley crowd of other tongues.
We
to the
find that scarcely
one of those features
is
character-
of present-day English. FRIEDERICH MtJLLER thus describes the distinguishing traits of the languages of the Arian type l " In the Indo-Germanic languages istic
:
stem and word are rigorously discriminated ". In English words such as man or wish no one is able " The two categories to make any such separation. of noun and verb are kept clearly from each other." root,
so in English e.g., man is generally a noun, but used as a verb when we say, "Man the skip" " Nouns belong compare also / wish and my wish.
Not
:
it is
;
1
Grundriss der Sprachwissenschaft,
iii.,
2, p. 420.
INTRODUCTION. to one of three genders, masculine, feminine, or neuter."
From English grammatical gender has disappeared. The distinction between the several grammatico-
"
is
logical categories is
This
here carried out strictly."
not the case in English, where, to mention only
one
nouns and
point,
adverbs
be
may
used
as
adjectives.
But
3. (2)
if
the
old
order
has
thus
changed,
yielding place to new, the question naturally arises Which of these two is the better order? Is the sum
:
of those infinitesimal modifications which have led our language so far away from the original state to be termed evolution or dissolution, growth or decay ? Are languages as a rule progressive or regressive ?
And, specially, is modern English superior or inferior to primitive Arian ? If
I
am
right in
my
interpretation of the tendencies
of recent philology, the answer cannot be doubtful but there is as little doubt that this answer will be ;
the exact opposite of what an older generation of linguists
would have given as
therefore be of
some
their verdict.
interest to
may
It
examine more
closely
the linguistic philosophy of the age that is now going How did the leading men of some thirty years sify and estimate different types of speech,
out.
and what place did they assign as modern English ? It would scarcely be possible to bctt