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I certainly wouldn't be able to explain how every irregular verb came about, but would assume that they started out as regular (i.e. they conformed to a particular pattern or one of a number of patterns) and various natural sound changes gradually affected the individual forms messing up the neat pattern
It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
I'm not entirely sure of my facts but I think the strong verbs are actually the oldest ones referring to the most fundamental human activities - eat/ate, sit/sat, come/came, whereas more recent verbs are regular. In Germanic languages that means adding the so-called dental suffix d or t: play/played, burn/burnt. Any new verb coming into the language will be regular, eg: I texted him.
I'm not entirely sure of my facts but I think the strong verbs are actually the oldest ones referring to the most fundamental human activities - eat/ate, sit/sat, come/came, whereas more recent verbs are regular. In Germanic languages that means adding the so-called dental suffix d or t: play/played, burn/burnt. Any new verb coming into the language will be regular, eg: I texted him.
I gave up German before we got on to things like that. German(ic) is quite complicated having a longer history, I suppose, than Romance languages. And I've no knowledge at all of any other family of languages like Slavic.
Certainly, it's a rule that irregularities continue longer the more common/familiar the verb/noun; whereas analogy plays some part in regularising forms that aren't in common use.
It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
Someone in my street has a poster in their window advertising a sale of 'New and preloved children's toys'. This expression appears to be taking over from 'pre-owned', and is even more teeth-grindingly awful. I'm not sure what makes it so detestable - the euphemistic evasion of 'second-hand', or the saccharine sentimentality of the introduction of the idea of love to a commercial transaction, as though giving up outgrown toys would be such an emotional wrench.
Ghastly, of course. And an odd construction too - 'pre-loved' and 'pre-owned' here presumably meaning 'previously, loved', 'previously, owned'; but 'pre-' surely normally means 'before' - 'pre-war' meaning, say, before 1939 - so here - what were they 'before' they were loved, owned??
Good point, Vinteuil. And 'pre' has now entered colloquial speech (broadcast, too, I fancy) as a discrete word meaning 'before', as in 'pre the election', 'pre the roman occupation' etc. Doesn't make any more sense of the neologism, though.
In the summer I spent some time with a woman who frequently, apparently unable to think of the right word, would say things like 'Can you pass me the eggy-lifty thing?' (i.e. a spatula). It was mildly endearing and became a bit of a joke between us. Recently, I was talking to a young graduate (of Women's Studies) about her ambition for a master's degree, which she said would probably be 'in something gendery'. I'd been wondering if these are examples of a trend and have just overheard two builders talking in the street and one said to the other 'You need one of those pushy-offy things'. Has anybody else some across this forgetty-guessy usage?
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