91勛圖

The English of a Millennium Ago: 91勛圖 compiles "Dictionary of Old English"

Now at H, the Centre for Medieval Studies' dictionary is close to defining every word from the languages earliest days

Just when you think you know your own language, along comes a hellwyrgen.

Rob Getz ran across the creature in a 12th-century manuscript, where it was pushing some thieves suffering torments in hell into a pit of boiling tar.

As an interim co-editor of the Dictionary of Old English, a 91勛圖 project that aims to map all of the roughly 35,000 words from the earliest form of the language, Getz is no stranger to challenging words. But this one was a stretch.

Not so much the first part which is obvious hell. But the second part looked like it might be derived directly from the verb wyrgan or wyrigan meaning to curse, revile, condemn. Its actually identical to the second part of a noun used to describe the mother of the monster Grendel in the Anglo-Saxon epic Beowulf.

So in the end, a hellwyrgen turns out to be something like a monstrous female creature from hell, or hell-hag.

Old English, which arose from the Germanic language of the Anglo-Saxon settlers who came to Britain from northern Europe in the fifth and sixth centuries, is the direct ancestor of our modern tongue.

It has bequeathed us dozens of common words from hound (hund) to house (堯贖莽). But the language has changed so much over the centuries that anyone reading an Old English text such as Beowulf would not recognize most of the words. Even the alphabet was different with fewer letters, a different letter for w, the wonderful eth (簸) and the runic thorn (臘) standing in for th.

Scholars at the Faculty of Arts & Science's Centre for Medieval Studies have been working on a comprehensive dictionary of the tongue since the 1970s, and with the release of h this year, they have now published definitions for more than half the words.

Computers have made things somewhat quicker, and a digitized corpus, consisting of at least one copy of every known text in Old English (from poems to royal records), means that they can now search more easily for words and citations. But scholars still have to organize the words and define their meaning.

Here, there is no algorithm to aid them just countless dictionaries, Latin sources and the lexicographers best intuition.

Some words appear only once in the corpus, while others, such as the Old English for hand, head and heart are both common and complicated. The 39-page entry for heorte (heart) contains more than a dozen major meanings, including the seat of love, of courage and even of the intellectual faculties.

The section on the letter h was particularly difficult, and not just because it begins with more words than any other except s and f. It contains key verbs and pronouns, as well as the interrogatives who, what, when, where and why all of which began with hw in Old English. The interrogatives are fairly uncomplicated in terms of their meaning, says Stephen Pelle, an interim co-editor of the dictionary  but they can be very complicated grammatically.

Old English portrays another world, a world where rain might be described as heavens showers (heofonscur), but the language is also a window into the philosophical, moral, legal and linguistic roots of our own.

If were to understand those roots, we need to know the language the people spoke, says Getz. To that end, the lexicographers are trying to be as comprehensive as possible, picking up words earlier dictionary makers missed.

If were doing our job right, says Pelle, we should be able to catch just about every word that survives in an old English text.


Illustration: Charles&Thorn

Ten Interesting Words from Old English

Hring ring. A lot of words that today start with consonants like "r," "l" and "n" began in Old English with h. Thus hleahtor (l硃喝眶堯喧梗娶), hnutu (nut) and hnappian (to nap). (The h was pronounced, at least in the early Old English period so hleahtor would sound similar to the modern word laughter with a huff of breath at the beginning.)

H, ho, hit the ancestors of our he, she and it. They occur about 200,000 times in the old English corpus.

晨贖莽 house, building and, in some contexts, brothel. The Anglo-Saxons loved compound words and 堯贖莽 figures in more than 100 of them, including ealu-堯贖莽 (ale house), gyst-堯贖莽 (guest house) and pleg-堯贖莽 (theatre or playhouse).

晨梗棗梭棗臘-堯梗梭鳥 a helmet that makes the wearer invisible. A demon wearing one of these figures in a medieval retelling of Genesis. He sneaks into Paradise and tries to trick Adam and Eve into eating the forbidden fruit.

晨喝紳勳眶-莽鳥疆釵 It sounds like a breakfast cereal, and it certainly has a sweet side. It comes from the Old English for honey and smack, or taste so it means taste or flavour of honey.

晨疆娶款梗莽喧-堯硃紳餃款喝梭梭 harvest handful or the grain given a labourer as his due during harvest.

晨ラ鳥梗餃 marriage but also cohabitation, adultery and even the intercourse of animals.

晨滄疆喧 The most famous hard-to-define word in old English, 堯滄疆喧 opens the great Anglo-Saxon epic Beowulf. As a pronoun, its well understood. As a particle or interjection, as in Beowulf, not so much. Seamus Heaney, the great Irish poet who translated the poem to acclaim in 2000, rendered it simply as so. Others have gone for lo, hark and behold. The Dictionary of Old Englishs answer is: It depends. It might mean: now, so, listen, why, now look, indeed, etc..., but it depends on the context. The complete definition covers 26 pages.

This story is republished from 91勛圖 Magazine

 

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