Read American Language Online

Authors: H.L. Mencken

American Language (83 page)

BOOK: American Language
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Following are paradigms showing the conjugation of some of the more interesting verbs of the vulgate, with notes on variants:

Present
Preterite
Perfect Participle
am
16
was
17
been
18
attackt
attackted
19
attackted
beat
beaten,
20
or beat
beat
become
21
become
became
begin
begun
22
began
bend
bent
bent
bet
bet
bet
bind
bound
bound
Present
Preterite
Perfect Participle
bite
bitten
23
bit
bleed
bled
bled
blow
blowed, or blew, or blown
24
blowed, or blown
break
broke, or broken
25
broken, or broke
bring
brought, brung or brang
26
brought, or brung
build
built
built
burn
burnt
27
burnt
bust
28
busted, or bust
29
busted
buy
bought, or boughten
bought, or boughten
30
cast
casted
casted
catch
caught, or catched
31
caught, or catched
choose
chose, or chosen
chosen, or chose
32
Present
Preterite
Perfect Participle
climb
uclumb
33
clumb
cling (to hold fast)
clung, or clang
clung
cling (to ring)
clang
clung, or clang
come
come
34
come, or came
creep
crep, or
crope
crow
crope
crowed
cuss
35
crew
cussed
cut
cussed
cut
dare
cut
dared
deal
dared, or dast
36
dealt
dig
dole
dug
dive
dug dove
37
dived
do
done
38
done, or did
drag
drug
drug
draw
drawed
drawed, or drew
dream
drempt, or dremp
39
drempt, or dremp
drink
drunk, or drank
40
drank
Present
Preterite
Perfect Participle
drive
drove
41
drove
drown
drownded
42
drownded
eat
et, or eat
43
eat, ate, or et
44
fall
fell, or fallen
fell
feed
fed
fed
feel
felt
felt
fetch
45
fetched
fetched
fight
fought
46
fought
find
found
found
fine
found
47
found
fling
flung, or flang
flung
Present
Preterite
Perfect Participle
flow
flew
flowed
fly
flew
flew
forbid
forbid
forbid
forget
forgot, or forgotten
forgotten
forsake
forsaken
forsook
freeze
frozen, or froze
48
froze
get
49
got, or gotten
gotten,
50
or got
give
give, or given
51
give, or gave
glide
glode
52
glode
go
went
went, or gone
grope
grope
53
grope
grow
growed
growed
hang
hung
54
hung
have
had
had, or hadden
hear
heerd, or hern
heerd, or hern
heat
55
het, or heaten
het, or heaten
heave
hove
hove
Present
Preterite
Perfect Participle
help
helped, or help
helped, or help
hide
hidden
56
hid
hist
57
histed
histed
hit
hit
hit
hold
helt
helt, or held
holler
hollered
hollered
hurt
hurt
hurt
keep
kep
kep, or kept
kneel
kneeled
kneeled, or knelt
know
knowed
knew, or knowed
58
lay
laid, or lain
lain, or laid
lead
led
led
lean
lent
lent
leap
lep
lep
learn
lernt
lernt
lend
59
loaned
loaned
let
left
60
left
lie (to falsify)
lied
lied
lie (to recline)
61
laid, or lain
lain, or laid
light
lit
lit
loosen
62
loosened
loosened
lose
lost
lost
make
made
made
mean
ment
ment
meet
met
met
mow
mown
mowed
pay
paid
paid
plead
pled
pled
prove
proven, or proved
proven
63
quit
quit
quit
Present
Preterite
Perfect Participle
raise
raised
64
raised
recognize
65
recognize
recognize
rench
66
renched
renched
ride
ridden
67
rode
68
rile
69
riled
riled
ring
rung
rang
rise
rose, or riz
70
rose, or riz
run
run
ran
sass
71
sassed, or sass
sassed, or sass
say
sez, said, or say
said
see
seen, see, or seed
saw, or see
72
set
73
set
sat
shake
shaken, or shuck
shook
shine (to polish)
shined
shined
shoe
shoed
shoed
show
shown
shown
shut
74
shut
shut
sing
sung
sang
sink
sunk
sank
skin
skun, or skan
skun
sleep
slep
slep, or slept
slide
slid
slid
sling
slung, or slang
slang, or slang
Present
Preterite
Perfect Participle
smell
smelt
smelt
sneak
snuck
snuck
speak
spoke, or spoken
spoke
75
speed
speeded
speeded
spell
spelt
spelt
spill
spilt
spilt
spin
span
span, or spun
spit
spit
spit
spoil
spoilt
spoilt
spring
sprung
sprang
steal
stole
stole
sting
stang
stung
stink
stank
stunk, or stank
strike
struck
struck
sweat
sweat
76
sweat
sweep
swep
swep
swell
swole
swollen
swim
swum
swam
swing
swang
swung
take
taken, or tuck
took,
77
or tuck
teach
78
taught
taught
tear
torn
tore
tell
tole
79
tole
tend
80
tended, tend, or tent
tended
think
thought
81
thought
throw
throwed, or thrown
throwed, or threw
82
wake
woke
woken
Present
Preterite
Perfect Participle
wear
wore
wore
weep
wep
wep
wet
wet
wet
win
won, wan, or win
83
won, or wan
wish
84
wished
wished
wring
wrung, or wrang
wrang, or wrung
write
written
wrote
85

A glance at these paradigms is enough to show several general tendencies, the most obvious of which is the transfer of verbs from the strong conjugation with vowel change to the weak without it, and
vice versa
. The former began before the Norman Conquest, and was marked during the Middle English period. Chaucer used
growed
for
grew
in the prologue to “The Wife of Bath’s Tale,” and
rised
for
rose
and
smited
for
smote
are in John Purvey’s edition of the Bible,
c
. 1385. Many of these transformations were afterward abandoned, but a large number survived, for example,
climbed
for
clomb
as the preterite of
to climb
, and
melted
for
molt
as the preterite of
to melt
. Others showed themselves during the early part of the Modern English period.
Comed
as the perfect participle of
to come
, and
digged
as the preterite of
to dig
are both in Shakespeare, and the latter is also in Milton and in the Authorized Version of the Bible. This tendency went furthest, of course, in the vulgar speech, and it has been embalmed in the English dialects.
I seen
and
I knowed
, for example, are common to all of them. But during the Seventeenth Century, for some reason to me unknown, there arose a contrary tendency — that is, toward strong conjugations. The vulgar speech of Ireland, which preserves many Seventeenth Century forms, shows it plainly.
Ped
for
paid, gother
for
gathered
, and
ruz
for
raised
are still heard there, and P. W. Joyce says flatly that the Irish, “retaining the old English custom [
i.e.
, the custom of the period of Cromwell’s invasion,
c
. 1650], have a leaning toward the strong inflection.”
86
Certain forms of the early American national period, now reduced to the estate of localisms, were also survivors of the Seventeenth Century.

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